Rural Clinics Keep Accreditation Green Light Through 2032
Published Date: 3/10/2026
Notice
Summary
The American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities (QUAD A) got the green light to keep accrediting rural health clinics for Medicare and Medicaid from March 23, 2026, to March 23, 2032. This means rural clinics can continue using QUAD A’s stamp of approval to show they meet federal health standards and keep serving patients. Clinics, patients, and Medicare/Medicaid programs all benefit from this smooth, trusted process.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
QUAD A Approved to Deem Rural Clinics
CMS approved the American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities (QUAD A) to continue accrediting rural health clinics from March 23, 2026 through March 23, 2032. If a rural health clinic is accredited by QUAD A, CMS may "deem" that clinic as meeting the Medicare conditions so the clinic can participate in Medicare or Medicaid without a separate State survey. This approval keeps a recognized accreditation route available for clinics and the patients who rely on them.
Accreditation Option Remains Voluntary
Accreditation by an approved national accrediting organization (like QUAD A) continues to be voluntary for rural health clinics. Clinics may choose accreditation to be deemed to meet Medicare conditions instead of undergoing State surveys, or they may continue with State certification and surveys.
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