HRSA designation data Public-data reference Medically Underserved Area

SC · Healthcare shortage profile

Oconee County, SC

Home to 78,607 residents, with 5 active HRSA shortage designations.

Active HPSAs
5
Population
78,607
Peak shortage score
21.0
MUA Index
60.7

Healthcare shortage designations from HRSA. FIPS: 45073. Population: 78,607.

Oconee County, SC (population 78,607) has 2 primary care, 1 mental health, and 2 dental Health Professional Shortage Area designations active according to HRSA. The county is also designated a Medically Underserved Area (MUA) with an MUA Index of 60.7. Shortage severity scores and individual HPSA designations are detailed below.

2
Primary Care HPSAs
1
Mental Health HPSAs
2
Dental HPSAs

HPSA Scores

Primary Care 15.0
Mental Health 21.0
Dental 21.0

Scores range 0–25 (primary/mental health), 0–26 (dental). Higher = greater need.

Medically Underserved Area

MUA Designated
MUA Index: 60.7

Highest-severity HPSA designations

All 5 active (designated) HPSAs in Oconee County, ranked by HRSA shortage score.

Name Type Score
ROSA CLARK MEDICAL CLINIC INC mental_health 21.0
ROSA CLARK MEDICAL CLINIC INC dental 21.0
ROSA CLARK MEDICAL CLINIC INC primary_care 15.0
LI - Oconee County primary_care 13.0
LI-Oconee County dental 13.0

What the HRSA Data Shows for Oconee County

Oconee County, SC — population 78,607 carries 5 active Health Professional Shortage Area designations in the HRSA Data Warehouse: 2 in primary care, 1 in mental health, and 2 in dental. The county is also flagged as a Medically Underserved Area, scoring 60.7 on the MUA Index (lower scores indicate greater need). These three HPSA categories are evaluated independently by HRSA, so a county can show heavy pressure on one axis — for example mental-health access — while remaining closer to the provider ratio threshold for primary care.

The county's highest shortage-severity score across the three categories is 21.0, which crosses the 17-point threshold HRSA uses to flag high-priority shortage areas eligible for National Health Service Corps placement and enhanced Medicare reimbursement. Primary-care scoring reached 15.0 (0–25 scale). Mental-health scoring reached 21.0 (0–25 scale). Dental scoring reached 21.0 (0–26 scale). HPSA scores weight the provider-to-population ratio, poverty rate, travel time to the nearest source of care, and — for dental — water fluoridation status. They are recalculated as HRSA updates its quarterly designation cycle.

HRSA lists 5 active (designated) HPSA records tied to Oconee County, covering the specific facilities, geographies, and population groups that received the designation; the table above shows the most severe. This designation data is the basis for more than thirty federal programs — loan repayment through the National Health Service Corps, Medicare bonus payments, Community Health Center grants, and J-1 visa waivers — which together channel billions of dollars annually to recruit providers into HPSAs. These figures describe structural access to care only; they are not a substitute for medical advice, and patients searching for a specific appointment should contact a provider directly or consult their insurance network.

Oconee County designations by care type

Active Health Professional Shortage Area designations in the county, by provider category.

designations
Source HRSA Data Warehouse — designated HPSAs As of 2025

Source: HRSA Data Warehouse — Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA) + Medically Underserved Areas/Populations (MUA/P) HPSA primary-care, mental-health, and dental designations for Oconee County, SC · 2024 HRSA designation data updated quarterly; HPSA scores 0-25 (primary/mental) and 0-26 (dental); higher = greater shortage severity. Coverage tiers from U.S. Census ACS PUMS + KFF state tracker.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many healthcare shortage areas does Oconee County have?

Oconee County, SC has 5 Health Professional Shortage Area designations: 2 in primary care, 1 in mental health, and 2 in dental care, according to HRSA data.

Is Oconee County a Medically Underserved Area?

Yes, Oconee County is designated as a Medically Underserved Area (MUA) by HRSA. The MUA Index for this county is 60.7. MUA designation qualifies the area for enhanced federal funding and provider incentive programs.

What does an HPSA score mean?

HPSA scores range from 0 to 25 for primary care and mental health (0 to 26 for dental). Higher scores indicate greater shortage severity. Areas with scores of 17 or above are considered high-priority shortage areas eligible for National Health Service Corps placement and enhanced Medicare/Medicaid reimbursement.

What healthcare providers are needed in Oconee County?

Based on HRSA shortage designations, Oconee County needs additional providers in primary care (family physicians, internists, pediatricians), mental health (psychiatrists, psychologists, clinical social workers), and dental care (dentists, dental hygienists). The National Health Service Corps offers loan repayment and scholarship programs for providers who serve in designated shortage areas.

How are HPSA designations used by federal programs?

HPSA designations determine eligibility for over 30 federal programs, including National Health Service Corps placements, Community Health Center grants, Medicare bonus payments (10% for physicians in HPSAs), J-1 visa waiver programs for international medical graduates, and Rural Health Clinic certification. These programs channel billions of dollars annually to underserved communities.

How does Oconee County compare to other counties in SC?

Oconee County has 5 total HPSA designations with a peak shortage score of 21.0. You can compare shortage levels across all counties in SC on the state overview page, or view national county rankings to see where Oconee County stands relative to the rest of the country.

Source: HRSA Data Warehouse. FIPS: 45073. PlainHealthAccess is not affiliated with HRSA or any government agency.

Related

Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from the HRSA Data Warehouse. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.

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