sponsored
Ending LGBT Health Inequities
Philanthropy can pursue several effective approaches to improve LGBT health.
Innovations in health care policies and programs (more)
Philanthropy can pursue several effective approaches to improve LGBT health.
Expanding public transit systems to connect low-income communities to healthy environments, high-quality education, and well-paying jobs isn’t enough. Transit has to be affordable as well as accessible.
Fair housing initiatives that focus on dispersion ignore the social structures and processes that result in the inequitable distribution of resources necessary for health.
A coalition of organizations is improving the health of low-income communities.
With Kid Power, the U.S. Fund for UNICEF is using technology to leverage children’s desire to help other children.
By following the right regimen, pharmaceutical companies can boost their ability to bring life-saving medicines to poor customers.
Youth voices in resource-constrained environments suggest that understanding socio-economic context is an important factor in encouraging innovation.
We can drive more capital to community-driven solutions that deliver results, but first we need a change in mindset—one that focuses on outcomes—using data and partnerships.
We need a more systemic and accessible way for underserved individuals to share their beliefs, insights, and experiences directly with policymakers, nonprofits, and their own communities.
The private sector has an important role to play in ending the HIV/AIDS epidemic and improving health systems as a whole.