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Tufts Health Plan Foundation Board Approves Additional Funding for Organizations Responding to Coronavirus
$900,000 will support recovery and rebuilding in communities across the region
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation Announces Healthy Food, Healthy Community Award
Tufts Health Plan Foundation Awards Nearly $1 Million to Nine Community Organizations
Age Well Ambassadors Program to Launch in Greater Danbury
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation Awards $15,000 in Grants to Six CT Non-Profits for Health and Wellness Initiatives
Cigna Foundation Announces Availability of $5 Million in Grants to Reduce Child Food Insecurity
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation Awards More Than $1.25 Million to 885 Organizations in 2018
Cigna Foundation Grant Will Help Hartford Public Library Assist Opioid Overdose Victims
Cigna Grant Enables March of Dimes to Expand Supportive Pregnancy Care
Harvard Pilgrim Awards Quality Grant Funding to 11 Providers for 2018
Aetna Foundation’s New Awards Shine the “Spotlight” on Programs That Are Improving Community Health
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation Awards Over $2.3M to More Than 900 Organizations in 2017
PERSPECTIVE: Access to Healthy Foods: How Far Are You Willing to Go?
HARTFORD, CT -- Blog post by by Garth Graham, M.D., MPH, is a leading authority on social determinants of health. President of the Aetna Foundation since 2013 and Vice President of Community Health for Aetna, Inc., Dr. Graham is a former deputy assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the Obama and Bush administrations where he also ran the Office of Minority Health.
For the first time in the history of the United States, today’s youth are expected to have a shorter life-span than their parents. With medical, scientific and technological advances, this notion seems dumbfounding. But when we step away from the science and technology and take a deeper look at our communities, you can find the root causes. Access to healthy food, public safety and environmental factors are all driving forces behind this decline in longevity. These social determinants of health are becoming increasingly influential to our health . . .