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American Heart Association Extends Rural Health Program to Address Cardiovascular Disparities in Texas Communities

Building Texas Show Staff August 26, 2025
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American Heart Association Extends Rural Health Program to Address Cardiovascular Disparities in Texas Communities

Summary

The American Heart Association's three-year extension of its Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator program through 2028 will provide critical resources to rural Texas hospitals, addressing significant health disparities that see rural residents facing 30% higher stroke risk and 40% greater heart disease likelihood compared to urban populations.

Full Article

The American Heart Association has extended its Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator program through June 2028, marking a significant commitment to addressing health disparities between rural and urban communities. Research demonstrates that rural Americans face a 30% higher risk of stroke, are 40% more likely to develop heart disease, and live an average of three years fewer than their urban counterparts.

The program extension offers three-year no-cost enrollment opportunities for new rural organizations participating in Get With The Guidelines programs for coronary artery disease, heart failure, and stroke. Critical Access Hospitals will receive complimentary access to all five Get With The Guidelines programs, including atrial fibrillation and resuscitation. This initiative provides rural program participants with access to the peer-to-peer American Heart Association Rural Community Network, dedicated quality program consultants, quarterly learning collaboratives, and educational resources specifically tailored to rural hospital clinicians.

Since its 2022 launch, the Accelerator has dramatically expanded rural hospital participation, with 430 hospitals enrolling at no cost and more than 1,000 rural hospitals now engaged in over 1,500 Get With The Guidelines programs nationwide. The program's impact is evident in the recognition awards earned by more than 650 rural hospitals in 2025 alone, representing a nearly 30% increase over the previous year. The extension includes enhancements to the Rural Get With The Guidelines registry and reporting systems to ensure alignment with current scientific standards and relevance for rural healthcare settings.

Dr. Eduardo Sanchez, chief medical officer for prevention at the American Heart Association, emphasized that rural hospitals serve as vital access points for over 60 million people living in rural communities. The program extension underscores the organization's commitment to enhancing cardiovascular and stroke care through collaborative opportunities, resources, education, and data-driven strategies that improve outcomes and save lives. Additional program features include the launch of the Rural Accelerator Quality Improvement Challenge Scholarship, offering competitive awards to support hospitals sharing model practices at national conferences. For more information, visit https://heart.org/ruralaccelerator.

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