Abstract
Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) has emerged as a powerful tool for bedside diagnosis and management, offering real-time clinical insights and cost savings. Its integration into rural family medicine could reduce reliance on advanced imaging, improve patient satisfaction, and support physician versatility across primary, emergency, and procedural care. Despite these advantages, POCUS adoption remains limited, largely due to ambiguous and inconsistent reimbursement policies. Rural Health Clinic all-inclusive payment models, state Medicaid variability, and Local Coverage Determination gaps undermine financial sustainability. Cost analyses demonstrate meaningful system-level savings, yet physician revenue remains constrained, particularly in Medicare-heavy rural populations. Policy solutions include adjusting rural payment models, establishing national Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs), introducing visit modifiers, and leveraging tele-ultrasound and hybrid training approaches. Complementary pathways, such as limited out-of-pocket patient payments, may provide short-term support but risk inequities. Aligning reimbursement policy with demonstrated clinical and economic benefits is critical to scaling POCUS in rural family medicine and strengthening equitable access to care.