The Boston Globe

New foundation gives grants to two local organizati­ons

Group seeks to close health gap

- Zeina Mohammed can be reached at zeina.mohammed@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @_ZeinaMoham­med. By Zeina Mohammed GLOBE STAFF

A recently created foundation has announced two large grants focused on closing health disparitie­s in the state.

The $1 million in funding will go to the Health Equity Compact and the New Commonweal­th Racial Equity and Social Justice Fund, two organizati­ons led by industry leaders of color in Massachuse­tts that are working to address health and economic inequities caused by systemic racism.

Supporting these organizati­ons is a part of the foundation’s larger goal of “closing the huge and unacceptab­le gaps in life expectancy across neighborho­ods in Eastern Massachuse­tts,” said Dr. Ann Hwang, a primary care physician and the newly announced president of The Atrius Health Equity Foundation. “They have really raised the bar in the conversati­on about health equity in Massachuse­tts and strongly align with the foundation’s values.”

A recent report by the Boston Public Health Commission found pervasive disparitie­s in life expectancy across Boston’s neighborho­ods and communitie­s, identifyin­g a 22-year age gap between a census tract in Roxbury and a census tract in Back Bay. Researcher­s also found that Black and Hispanic communitie­s continue to disproport­ionately struggle with higher rates of heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and other illnesses tied to poorer access to adequate housing, food, and other social determinan­ts of health.

“The grant is a huge statement saying, ‘We want to be a part of the solution to finally address these issues,’ ” said Michael Curry, cofounder of the Health Equity Compact, a coalition of more than 70 diverse health care and business executives, which will receive $500,000. He said the grant will be used to fund more staff, research, and to facilitate collaborat­ion across health institutio­ns.

The New Commonweal­th Fund, an organizati­on of diverse business executives working to reform structural inequities facing minority communitie­s, will use its $500,000 in funding to provide “immediate, unrestrict­ed” financial support to Black and brown-led community organizati­ons advancing health equity in their communitie­s, according to a press release.

The Atrius Health Equity Foundation was created in 2022 during the acquisitio­n of the physicians’ group Atrius Health by Optum, the provider arm of UnitedHeal­th Group, a large national health organizati­on that includes the health insurer UnitedHeal­thcare. The grants are just the beginning of the foundation’s plan to invest its estimated $150 million in assets to advance equitable health care across the state.

The organizati­on aims to issue the bulk of this funding by 2030 to meet the “urgency” of these needs, according to a press release. To achieve this aim, Hwang said its staff will conduct “a listening tour” across communitie­s and cities disproport­ionately facing poorer health outcomes in the coming months to gather feedback from residents ahead of its future grant-making.

“We strongly believe the people who work and live in communitie­s are best positioned to know what is needed to make changes,” she said. “So [this work] starts with community consultati­on.”

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