Corning Area Healthcare To Receive Nearly $1 Million In Federal Funding

by Talk Business & Politics staff ([email protected]) 226 views 

A new clinic with ties to Northeast Arkansas will receive $983,403 in Affordable Care Act funding to help 2,825 patients, officials announced Tuesday.

Corning Area Healthcare, Inc. received the funding for the delivery of comprehensive primary healthcare services, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell said.

Nationwide, $169 million in Affordable Care Act funding will go to 266 new health center sites in 46 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, increasing access to health care services for a projected over 1.2 million patients. These awards build on the $101 million awarded to 164 new health center sites in May 2015.

Statewide, four other clinics received about $2.4 million funding in May 2015. They include:

· ARCARE in Augusta, $1,007,179.
· EAST ARKANSAS FAMILY HEALTH CENTER, INC. in West Memphis, $441,667.
· HEALTHY CONNECTIONS INC., Mena, $541,667.
· ST. FRANCIS HOUSE NWA, INC., in Springdale, $441,667.

“Across the country, health centers have provided a source of high-quality primary care for people in rural and urban communities for 50 years,” said Acting Deputy Secretary Mary Wakefield. “These Affordable Care Act funds build on the strong legacy of the health center program and provide even more individuals and families in Arkansas with access to the care they need the most.”

This investment will add to the more than 700 new health center sites that have opened as a result of the Affordable Care Act, including those awarded earlier this year. What started with one clinic in rural Mississippi and another in South Boston is today a national program that supports 1,300 community-based and patient-directed health centers with 9,000 sites serving nearly 23 million people.

“Health centers now provide primary care to one in fourteen people living in the United States,” said HRSA Acting Administrator Jim Macrae. “These awards mean that more communities than ever can count on a health center to help meet the increasing demand for primary care.”