Governor Patrick Morrisey today announced that West Virginia has secured $199 million the coming year from the federal Rural Health Transformation Fund
The award almost doubled the guaranteed minimum for the first year.
Nationally, disbursements for states are between $145 million and $281 million for the coming year.
Morrisey said the funding reflects the strength, depth and statewide focus of West Virginia’s plan to modernize rural healthcare delivery and improve outcomes for families and communities.
“The $199 million investment for 2026 provides a transformative foundation to improve health outcomes, expand access to care, and strengthen families and communities throughout West Virginia,” Morrisey said in an announcement of the funding.
“This award positions our state to deliver better care closer to home and build a healthier future for generations to come. It is also the highest per capita award of any state that West Virginia touches.”
Key initiatives of West Virginia’s framework include the “Mountain Health Challenge,” which encourages physical activity and efforts to remove harmful dyes from food, areas the early months of the Morrisey administration have emphasized already.
The Morrisey administration says the approved application also provides solutions to address:
— The distance between patients and providers.
— The lack of access of rural healthcare providers.
— Resources to support rural healthcare providers.
— Connecting West Virginians to the workforce as they become healthier.
— Preventing adverse health outcomes through nutrition, exercise, and lifestyle changes.
This is through The Rural Health Transformation Program, created under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” to distribute $50 billion over five years across all 50 states to strengthen rural health care.
The program to support rural health grew out of concerns that changes to Medicaid under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” would undercut already fragile rural health systems.
The program is being administered by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Of the full amount, $25 billion will be evenly divided among the 50 states, and discretionary dollars are being allocated to states based on each state’s application, the state’s rural nature and other policies. Allocation to each state is based on a competitive application process and guided by the quality of state-proposed strategies.
Morrisey’s administration said the $199 million investment for 2026 is more than the amount neighboring states Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania will receive next year. The $199 million for the first year of the five year award period is also the highest per capita award of any state that West Virginia touches.
The Morrisey administration said the money will be deployed strategically to enhance access to care, support the recruitment and retention of the healthcare workforce, expand telehealth services and strengthen rural health systems statewide.
“This investment is a long-term commitment to building modern healthcare systems that work for rural communities and support economic growth across West Virginia,” said Dr. Arvin Singh, secretary of health for the State of West Virginia.