The Southern Berks News

$143,500 awarded to address health issues

Five organizati­ons receive grants

- By Karen Shuey kshuey@readingeag­le.com

Five local organizati­ons have been awarded grants to fund programs that address health-related issues.

The Berks County Community Foundation awarded the grants, totaling $143,500, through its Home Health Care Foundation Fund.

The purpose of the fund is to provide assistance to programs that help residents recover from illness or disability at home, support preventive health care for residents and the overall community and provide health-related care to residents.

Grants are awarded to organizati­ons that serve residents in Berks and surroundin­g counties.

The Home Health Care Foundation Fund has distribute­d more than $658,700 since it was establishe­d at the community foundation in 2020.

The following are the grant recipients for this latest round:

• $40,000 will go to Berks Encore. The funding will support its Medically Tailored Meal pilot program, which will provide 25 people with two meals and one snack each day for 12 weeks. Medically tailored meals are delivered to those living with severe illness who are on diets designed to improve health outcomes, lower the cost of care and increase patient satisfacti­on.

• $40,000 will go to the Western Berks Ambulance Associatio­n. The funding will support ongoing cardiac monitor replacemen­ts.

• $30,000 will go to Opportunit­y House. The funding will help cover the costs of renovating two storage rooms into bedrooms for shelter residents recovering from illness, replace 75 shelter mattresses and support the salary of a new social worker who will coordinate a program for athome testing and recovery from COVID.

• $27,000 will go to the YMCA of Reading & Berks County to provide funding for its blood pressure self-monitoring program, which is designed to help adults with hypertensi­on lower and manage their blood pressure. The grant will cover the cost for 108 participan­ts in the first year of this program, including blood pressure monitors and cuffs for each participan­t.

• $6,500 will go to the John Paul II Center for Special Learning for medical and mental health crisis preparedne­ss. The center said the pandemic highlighte­d the center’s need to expand its medical supplies and train to respond more quickly to medical emergencie­s and mental health crises.

The fund will accept applicatio­ns for another round of grants from June 1 until Aug. 15 at bccf. link/grants. The maximum amount available for each organizati­on is $40,000.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States