Mission Health’s Community Investment Program is awarding over $890,000 in funding to a diverse group of 17 western North Carolina agencies, in a joint effort to improve the health of those served by Mission Health across the region.
The 2018 focus areas for the grants are:
·
Behavioral
Health and Substance Abuse
·
Chronic
Disease
·
Social
Determinants of Health (focusing on food security and homelessness)
·
Interpersonal
Violence
These focus areas are based on the top priority needs
identified through the Community Health Assessment process, which takes place
locally in each of the 18 counties in Mission Health’s service area of western
North Carolina.
“Mission Health’s partnerships with community organizations
heighten our ability to meet the diverse needs of our community’s most
vulnerable members,” said Sonya Greck, MSN, RN, Senior Vice President of
Behavioral Health, Safety Net, Community Investment and Facilities. “Improving
the health of our region is our mission, and it takes a collaborative effort; we
are excited about the partnerships with these organizations and the impact this
work will have in improving the quality of life for many in our community.”
The grantee organizations have proven histories of creating
effective partnerships with other agencies that are impacting at-risk
populations in one or more western North Carolina communities, and successfully
tackling community health challenges.
The agencies and programs funded by Community Investment
grants are:
·
All
Souls Counseling Center
·
Asheville
Buncombe Institute of Parity Achievement (ABIPA)
·
Bountiful
Cities
·
CARING
for Children
·
Council
on Aging of Buncombe County
·
FEAST
Asheville
·
Haywood
Street Congregation
·
Helpmate
·
Homeward
Bound of Western North Carolina
·
MANNA
FoodBank
·
MemoryCare
·
Mountain
Child Advocacy Center
·
PATH
(Partners Aligned Toward Health)
·
Pisgah
Legal Services
·
REACH
of Macon County
·
Southern
Reconciliation Ministries
·
YWCA
of Asheville and Western North Carolina
PATH Executive
Director Schell McCall says that this funding will directly support improved
community health as it relates to substance abuse prevention. "In 2015,
Mission Health supported Partners Aligned Toward Health in the form of in-kind
technical assistance relating to data analysis," McCall said. "The
new grant will enable the Mitchell Yancey Substance Abuse Task Force to
continue this effort to analyze the impact of our substance abuse prevention
initiatives and focus on those that are the most successful. Since 2009, the
Mitchell Yancey Substance Abuse Task Force has focused on the goal of creating
communities free of substance misuse behaviors in Mitchell and Yancey Counties
with a core approach to reducing and eliminating substance abuse that includes
awareness, education, advocacy, and prevention. The Task Force involves a broad
range of invested local stakeholders, including law enforcement, healthcare
providers, schools, local government, faith communities, and more. This recent
grant support also enables us to draw down the maximum amount of available
funding from our federal Drug Free Communities grant. The opioid crisis is a
growing threat to the health of our community. We are very grateful for this
support from Mission, and for the partnership and involvement of Blue Ridge
Regional Hospital in our substance abuse prevention efforts."
Another
grantee, Bountiful Cities, is an urban agricultural nonprofit that works to
teach agricultural skills within communities, and advocates for accessible,
healthy food systems. The organization also has a history of support from
Mission Health, and Program Director C. Nicole Hinebaugh noted that this grant
will not only nourish individuals, but communities. “In 2016-2017 the Mission
Health Community Investment funds enabled our Community Garden Network to
provide infrastructure improvements to 13 different community gardens in
Asheville and Buncombe County, as well as countless hours of Grass to Greens
edible landscaping support to three school gardens in partnership with FEAST
educational programming. These renewed funds in 2017-2018 will allow this
exciting work of the Community Garden Network to continue in partnership with
FEAST, and help to expand the Double Up Food Bucks (DUFB) program. This
expansion will support the continuation of the DUFB program at the French Broad
Food Co-op and the West Village Market; the program will also be offered at one
to two new store locations in Asheville. We estimate that this program will provide
access to free fresh produce to over 400 people in our county,” said Hinebaugh.
Additional funding will be assigned to strengthen the joint
efforts of Mission Health and OurVoice to address human trafficking, a
pervasive worldwide and local problem with serious emotional and physical
repercussions.
“Grant funding through Mission’s Community Investment
program is just one of the many ways Mission Health invests in the community”
said Ronald A. Paulus, MD, President and CEO of Mission Health. “Last
year alone Mission Health invested more than $183 million across western North
Carolina by providing charity care to patients, medical education and research,
programs and services which impact the health of western North Carolina
residents, and in unreimbursed costs of treating Medicare and Medicaid
patients.”
For more information on Mission Health’s Community
Investment program, visit http://www.mission-health.org/communityinvestment.php
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