The Federal Communications Commission will seek to establish a new $100 million Connected Care Pilot Program to support telehealth for low-income Americans, especially those living in rural areas and veterans, Commissioner Brendan Carr announced today. The commission will vote at its August meeting on a notice seeking comment on budgeting $100 million in Universal Service Fund support for the program. “I want to thank Chairman Pai who, as the son of two doctors, appreciates the role that telemedicine plays in connecting rural communities to health care opportunities,” Carr said. “I am grateful for the support he has shown as my office has worked on developing this pilot program. I also want to thank the leadership shown on these issues by Sens. John Thune [R-SD], Roger Wicker [R-MS], Deb Fischer [R-NE], Cory Gardner [R-CO], and Todd Young [R-IN] who have all urged the FCC to take additional steps in support of connected care deployments.”

Related News Articles

Headline
The AHA Aug. 13 commented to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission in anticipation of the commission’s 2024-2025 cycle. The AHA urged MedPAC to carefully…
Blog
More than 16 years ago, the U.S. House of Representatives designated July as National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month. Inspired by the work of author…
Perspective
It’s an understatement to say everything on the national political scene is both unprecedented and unpredictable these days.To state the obvious, there will be…
Blog
Minority Mental Health Awareness Month is an opportunity to acknowledge that we live in a time when the patients and communities we serve are experiencing the…
Headline
The AHA June 14 sent a letter to the Senate Finance Committee, responding to questions included in a white paper the committee wrote on chronic care through…
Headline
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention June 13 issued a Health Alert Network Health Advisory following a federal health care fraud indictment against…