What is a Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA)?
HPSAs(PDF - 399 KB) can be geographic areas, populations, or facilities. These areas have a shortage of primary, dental, or mental health care providers.
What is a geographic HPSA?
A shortage of providers for an entire group of people within a defined geographic area
What is a population HPSA?
A shortage of providers for a specific group of people within a defined geographic area. Examples include low-income populations, homeless populations, and migrant farmworker populations.
What is a facility HPSA?
Other Facility (OFAC)
Public or non-profit private medical facilities. They serve a population or geographic area with a shortage of providers.
Correctional Facility
Medium- to maximum-security federal and state correctional institutions
Youth detention facilities with a shortage of providers
State/County Mental Hospitals
State or county hospitals with a shortage of mental health providers (mental health designations only)
Automatic Facility HPSAs (Auto-HPSAs)
Facilities automatically designated as HPSAs based on statue or through regulation. These include:
Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs)
Provide primary care to an area or group of people in need.
Offer a sliding fee scale.
Provide complete services.
Have an ongoing quality assurance program.
Have a governing board of directors.
All organizations receiving grants under Health Center Program Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act are FQHCs.
Provide medical services to members of federally recognized tribes and Alaska Natives
IHS and Tribal Hospitals
Federal Indian Health Service (IHS) and tribally run hospitals
Provide medical services to members of federally recognized tribes and Alaska Natives
Dual-funded Community Health Centers/Tribal Clinics
Health centers that receive funding from tribal entities and HRSA
Provide medical services to members of federally recognized tribes and Alaska Natives
CMS-Certified Rural Health Clinics (RHCs)*
Outpatient clinics located in non-urbanized areas that are Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) certified and meet NHSC Site requirements (such as accepting Medicaid and CHIP and providing services on a sliding fee scale).
Which federal programs use HPSAs?
The National Health Service Corps (NHSC) created shortage designation. It helps us distribute participants to where they’re needed most.
Other federal programs use shortage designations for resource distribution.
Primary Care
Shortage Designation Option
National Health Service Corps (NHSC)
Nurse Corps
Health Center Program
IHS Loan Repayment Program
CMS HPSA Bonus Payment Program
CMS Rural Health Clinic Program
J-1 Visa Waiver
Geographic HPSA
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Population HPSA
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Facility HPSA
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Dental care
Shortage Designation Option
National Health Service Corps (NHSC)
Nurse Corps
Health Center Program
IHS Loan Repayment Program
CMS HPSA Bonus Payment Program
CMS Rural Health Clinic Program
J-1 Visa Waiver
Geographic HPSA
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Population HPSA
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Facility HPSA
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Mental health
Shortage Designation Option
National Health Service Corps (NHSC)
Nurse Corps
Health Center Program
IHS Loan Repayment Program
CMS HPSA Bonus Payment Program
CMS Rural Health Clinic Program
J-1 Visa Waiver
Geographic HPSA
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Population HPSA
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Facility HPSA
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What is a Maternity Care Target Area (MCTA)?
Maternity Care Health Professional Target Areas (MCTAs) are areas within an existing Primary Care Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA) that are experiencing a shortage of maternity health care professionals.
What is a Medically Underserved Area/Population (MUA/P)?
MUAs and MUPs identify geographic areas and populations with a lack of access to primary care services. These designations help establish health maintenance organizations or community health centers.
MUAs have a shortage of primary care health services within geographic areas such as:
A whole county
A group of neighboring counties
A group of urban census tracts
A group of county or civil divisions.
MUPs have a shortage of primary care health services for a specific population subset within a geographic area. These groups may face economic, cultural, or language barriers to health care.
Some examples include:
People experiencing homelessness
People who are low-income
People who are eligible for Medicaid
Native Americans
Migrant farm workers
Which federal programs use MUA/Ps?
Many federal programs use MUA/Ps for distributing resources. We created MUA/Ps to help establish health maintenance organizations and community health centers.
These are some examples of programs that use MUA/Ps:
Shortage Designation Option
National Health Service Corps (NHSC)
Nurse Corps
Health Center Program
IHS Loan Repayment Program
CMS HPSA Bonus Payment Program
CMS Rural Health Clinic Program
J-1 Visa Waiver
MUA
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MUP
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What is an Exceptional Medically Underserved Population (Exceptional MUP)?
An Exceptional MUP identifies a specific population within a defined geographic area that doesn’t qualify as a MUP. Unusual circumstances prevent the population from having access to primary care services.
What is a Governor-Designated Secretary-Certified Shortage Areas for Rural Health Clinics?