A $50 billion fund to help rural hospitals could actually lead to service cuts
The emergency department at Big Sandy Medical Center in Montana is just one room, with a single curtain between two beds.
It's one of the many parts of the 25-bed rural hospital that need updating, former CEO Ron Wiens said.
He said the hospital, an essential service in its namesake town of nearly 800 residents in the state's sprawling north-central high plains, needs at least $1 million for deferred maintenance, including a failing HVAC system. But the facility has struggled to make payroll each month and can't afford to make all the fixes, Wiens said.
Built by farmers and ranchers in 1965, Big Sandy Medical Center began with nine beds. Today, a similar community effort — donations and grants to plug financial holes each year — keeps it afloat.
Wiens, who recently left his position at the hospital, said he wishes Big Sandy could get funding from Montana's share of the $50 billion federal Rural Health Transformation Program to renovate the hospital and direct payments to help secure its future. The state received more than $233 million in its first-year award.
But the hospital may not get the kind of help he sought.
That's because the five-year federal program focuses on new, creative ways to improve access to rural health care, not on directly funding services and renovations. And Montana is one of at least 10 states whose leaders say projects launched under the federal program could lead rural hospitals to cut services so they can continue to afford to offer emergency and other essential care.
Congressional Republicans created the fund as a last-minute sweetener to their One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law last summer. The funding was intended to offset disproportionate fallout anticipated in rural communities from the law, which is expected to slash Medicaid spending by nearly $1 trillion over 10 years.
Montana's application for funding includes programs to make it easier for rural residents to get medical care and live a healthy lifestyle. For example, it says funding can be used to start community gardens, train paramedics to make home visits, open school-based clinics, or bring mobile clinics to rural areas.
The application also says Montana rural hospitals can receive payments for implementing recommendations, "including right-sizing select inpatient services" to match demand. In some cases, it says, right-sizing might mean "downsizing." The state says hospitals will have input and recommendations will be specific to each facility.
"That's what has all the hospitals on pins and needles, words like restructuring, reducing inpatient beds. Everybody is going, 'What is this going to look like?'" Wiens said.
The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services declined to answer questions about how it will carry out its right-sizing efforts.
A lifeline of care
Big Sandy cattle rancher Shane Chauvet doesn't want any services cut.
He credits Big Sandy Medical Center with saving his life after a flying piece of metal nearly cut off his arm during a windstorm a few years back.
"I looked over, saw it coming, and whack!" Chauvet recalled.
His wife drove him to the hospital, where they frantically pounded on the ER door while Chauvet's blood pooled on the ground.
Because of the storm, staffers worked on Chauvet with no power and no ability to summon a helicopter. He was then taken by ambulance 80 miles through intense rain and hail to a larger hospital.
Chauvet understands the state's plan doesn't call for eliminating emergency care, but he worries that reducing other services would set off a downward spiral for the hospital and his town.
In Oklahoma, realigning clinical services could mean "shutting down service lines," according to its application to the federal program. And in Wyoming, any facility that receives funding must agree to "reduce unprofitable, duplicative or nonessential service lines," according to its rural health law.
Monique McBride, business operations administrator at the Wyoming Department of Health, said the department interprets right-sizing as helping rural hospitals provide essential services — such as emergency departments, ambulance services, and labor and delivery units — while maintaining long-term, financial stability.