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HHS Announces Partnership with Morehouse
School of Medicine to Fight COVID-19 in Racial and Ethnic Minority and
Vulnerable Communities
$40
Million Initiative Will Help Communities Hardest Hit by the Pandemic
The U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Minority Health (OMH) announced the
selection of the Morehouse School of Medicine as the awardee for a new $40
million initiative to fight COVID-19 in racial and ethnic minority, rural and
socially vulnerable communities. The Morehouse School of Medicine will enter
into a cooperative agreement with OMH to lead the initiative to coordinate a
strategic network of national, state, territorial, tribal and local
organizations to deliver COVID-19-related information to communities hardest
hit by the pandemic.
“The Trump Administration
has made it a priority to support and empower Americans who have been most
impacted by COVID-19, including minority, rural, and socially vulnerable
communities,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “This new partnership between the
Morehouse School of Medicine and our Office of Minority Health will work with
trusted community organizations to bring information on COVID-19 testing,
vaccinations, and other services to the Americans who need it.”
The initiative – the
National Infrastructure for Mitigating the Impact of COVID-19 within Racial
and Ethnic Minority Communities (NIMIC) – is a three-year project designed to
work with community-based organizations across the nation to deliver
education and information on resources to help fight the pandemic. The
information network will strengthen efforts to link communities to COVID-19
testing, healthcare and social services and to best share and implement
effective response, recovery and resilience strategies.
“Underlying social determinants
of health and disparate burdens of chronic medical conditions are
contributing to worse COVID-related outcomes in minority and socially
vulnerable communities, and this partnership with Morehouse School of
Medicine is essential to improving our overall response,” said Assistant
Secretary for Health ADM Brett P. Giroir, M.D. “We’ve made important strides
over the past few months in fighting the pandemic, and with Morehouse School
of Medicine as our partner, we are ready to advance our efforts to support
our most affected communities.”
These social determinants
of health are the conditions in which we live, work, grow and age, that can
include working conditions; unemployment; underemployment; access to
essential goods and services such as water, sanitation and food; housing; and
access to quality healthcare. Such conditions may reflect inequities
experienced by disadvantaged communities, leading to poor health status and
adverse health outcomes and requiring community- and systems-level responses.
“We know the power of
partnerships to help us solve our most pressing public health challenges,”
said U.S. Surgeon General VADM Jerome M. Adams, M.D., M.P.H. “This initiative
has at its core the community-based organizations who know their people best
and who are committed to working collaboratively to reduce health-inequities
and make them healthy and safe.”
OMH announced the
initiative through a funding announcement on May 1. The NIMIC initiative is
expected to begin in July and the first award is for $14.6 million.
“Communities throughout
the country have already done a lot of hard work to adapt and respond to the
challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on racial and ethnic
minority, rural and vulnerable populations,” said Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Minority Health RADM Felicia Collins, M.D. “OMH and the Morehouse School
of Medicine look forward to continue working with our communities to link
them to the information, resources, healthcare and services needed to reduce
the spread of COVID-19.”
The Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Health (OASH), a division of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, provides public health and science advice to the
Secretary, and oversees the Department’s broad-ranging public health offices,
whose missions include minority health, HIV policy, women’s health, disease
prevention, human research protections and others. OASH also includes the
Office of the Surgeon General and the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned
Corps.
The Office of Minority Health (OMH)
is dedicated to improving the health of racial and ethnic minority
populations through the development of health policies and programs that will
help eliminate health disparities.
For more information about
the Office of Minority Health visit: www.minorityhealth.hhs.gov.
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Tuesday, June 23, 2020
HHS Announces Partnership with Morehouse School of Medicine to Fight COVID-19 in Racial and Ethnic Minority and Vulnerable Communities
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