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News » Mississippi expands telehealth, AI to save rural hospitals

Mississippi expands telehealth, AI to save rural hospitals

Mississippi expands telehealth, AI to save rural hospitals
Photo from University of Mississipi Medical Center

MISSISSIPPI, UNITED STATES — Mississippi is ramping up investments in telehealth and artificial intelligence (AI) to keep rural hospitals afloat, as state leaders deploy $206 million in federal funds to counter steep healthcare cuts and modernize care delivery across underserved communities.

According to a report from Healthcare IT News, the Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP) comes as rural providers face mounting financial pressure, with estimates suggesting up to $160 million in annual funding losses once federal reductions are fully implemented. 

For hospitals already operating on thin margins, the initiative represents both a lifeline and a pivot toward digital-first care.

Telehealth and AI anchor rural healthcare transformation

State officials and healthcare leaders say expanding virtual care and integrating AI are central to improving access while stretching limited clinical resources.

Chad Netterville, executive director of the Mississippi Rural Hospital Alliance, said the program was created “because of the deep cuts to healthcare.”

“Estimates suggest up to $160 million per year could be lost in Mississippi hospital funding once fully phased in,” Netterville added

At the same time, providers face infrastructure gaps that go beyond technology. 

“We’ve got rural hospitals that desperately need construction upgrades or have had leaks or plumbing or, you know, crumbling foundational issues,” said Dr. Jennifer Bryan, president of the Mississippi State Medical Association, in comments to Healthcare IT News.

Telehealth expansion under the TAPS initiative includes broadband upgrades, equipment deployment and school-based care programs. Yet adoption challenges remain. 

“It’s about teaching people,” Bryan said. “These are intelligent people. They just have never had a need to do that.”

AI is also emerging as a practical tool to relieve administrative burden and expand capacity. Bryan said the technology has already improved efficiency in clinical workflows. 

“We don’t have enough healthcare providers per patient,” she said, adding AI “gave me back about an hour and a half to two hours per day,” Bryan added.

Still, she urged caution in adoption. “Trust, but verify and go back and make sure that they said what you meant for it to say,” Bryan said.

What this means for healthcare outsourcing

The expansion of telehealth and AI under Mississippi’s rural health strategy is expected to drive increased demand for external support services across the United States healthcare sector, particularly among rural hospitals and safety-net providers facing staffing and financial constraints.

As providers adopt new digital platforms, the need for health IT support services—including help desks, system maintenance and user training—is likely to grow. 

Such functions are increasingly being handled by offshore and nearshore teams to provide around-the-clock technical assistance while managing costs.

The rise in virtual care is also creating operational demands tied to telehealth delivery. Hospitals and clinics must manage scheduling, patient onboarding and remote monitoring, prompting some organizations to seek third-party support to ensure continuity and efficiency in virtual care services.

Financial pressures linked to reimbursement cuts are expected to sustain demand for revenue cycle management (RCM) and medical coding services. Providers are turning to external partners to improve claims processing, reduce denials and stabilize cash flow as margins tighten.

At the same time, the integration of AI into clinical and administrative workflows is generating demand for analytics and data support

External vendors are increasingly being tapped to assist with data management, performance monitoring and compliance, particularly as providers navigate the risks associated with emerging technologies.

For healthcare systems, the shift reflects a broader trend toward supplementing internal capabilities with specialized external services. 

As rural providers work to scale digital care models with limited resources, outsourcing is emerging as one approach to maintaining operations and expanding access without significantly increasing overhead.

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