7:15-8:30 a.m. Breakfast
8:30-8:45 a.m. Opening remarks
8:45-9:45 a.m. The rural story: An update on rural health, data, and data challenges in 2025
This session will provide an overview of the current status of health, public health, and health care in rural communities using the most recent data, followed by a discussion of the ongoing rural data limitations and tips for finding data on specific topics. In addition to describing ongoing challenges with rural data, we will discuss the changing landscape of data access and considerations for identifying, using, and interpreting data.
9:45-10 a.m. Break
10-11 a.m. How cuts to Medicaid and SNAP will affect rural communities
Millions of people are set to lose health coverage and food benefits due to the recently passed GOP budget bill. Rural areas will be hardest hit by the cuts – rural health providers already stretched thin and many hospitals barely hanging on may have to close their doors. Health care deserts will expand. We’ll talk to experts about the implications of the budget bill for the millions of rural Americans who rely on Medicaid and SNAP.
11 a.m.-noon. Lessons from Georgia’s Medicaid work requirements
For two years, Georgia has had a Medicaid work requirement for some people in the expansion population. The rollout has been bumpy, and enrollment has been low. Now, with the passage of the administration’s megabill, 40 other states and the District of Columbia must implement similar requirements. What can Georgia’s program tell us about what’s ahead for the rest of the country?
Noon-1 p.m. Lunch
1-2 p.m. How being disconnected is killing rural Americans
In more than 200 mostly rural counties nationwide, residents lack high-speed internet and enough primary care and behavioral health care providers. Often, reliable transportation is a problem as well. That confluence of missing services makes it difficult to get care. In these places, according to an analysis by KFF Health News, people tend to die younger and live sicker lives. This panel will explore that data as well as introduce you to a digital navigator whose job is being cut by the Trump administration and a transportation expert about the unique challenges rural residents face. You’ll walk away with story ideas, and actionable tips on where to find data and sources.
2-3 p.m. The inside story: Voices from the front line workforce
You’ve heard about what’s coming in federal legislation and what’s being beta tested in Georgia. Now hear from health care workers with boots on the ground in rural Georgia. Half of Georgia counties have no OB/GYN. What’s it like to be an OB/GYN in rural Georgia? About one in 20 rural U.S. households have no car. What’s it like to be their only health worker for miles, as a pharmacist? The new budget law may endanger dozens of nursing homes in Georgia; what’s it like to run one of the healthy ones? Come hear from some providers and ask questions.
3-3:15 p.m. Break
3:15-4:15 p.m. Understanding the opioid epidemic’s toll on rural America
While it’s no secret that rural communities have been disproportionately affected by the opioid crisis, the epidemic’s grip on rural America is often treated like a foregone conclusion. In this panel, experts will discuss underreported trends and circumstances that journalists can highlight to give audiences a deeper understanding of the problem and its solutions.
4:15-5:15 p.m. How to overcome the barriers to vaccination in rural America
Vaccination has become a more fraught national issue than ever since the pandemic, but there have always been challenges to protecting rural Americans from vaccine-preventable diseases. Find out what those barriers are, from hesitancy in specific populations to access issues more broadly, and what interventions are making a difference in overcoming these difficulties. This panel will also explore how obstacles and solutions differ for different vaccines, different populations and different age groups.


