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2021 Fall Forum

Nov 15-19, 2021

Fall Forum: November 15-19, 2021

The 2021 virtual GIH Fall Forum provided policy-engaged funders with information on current issues, access to leading thinkers, and connections with grantmaking peers.

Agenda

November 15, 2021

  • Welcome Session & Lauren LeRoy Health Policy Lecture
    Dr. Alice Huan-mei Chen, Chief Medical Officer of Covered California presented the Lauren LeRoy Health Policy Lecture
    View the recording
  • Designing a Roadmap for an Equitable Post-COVID-19 Recovery
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November 16, 2021

  • Networking Session / Get to Know Your Colleagues

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

  • Building Momentum to Advance and Institutionalize Equity
    There is growing awareness of the structural inequities driving health disparities in the United States, which has led to new policies, programs, and people focused on health equity. At the same time, the country remains divided on many issues, and there is an increasingly vocal resistance to centering equity and structural discrimination in conversations about health. Given the complexity of the current moment, how can philanthropy help communities create a new normal through initiatives that are designed to ensure everyone has a fair and just opportunity to obtain their highest level of health?  In this action-oriented programming series, participants will discuss how to: move from crisis response to long-term recovery in ways that advance equity; use narrative change as a tool to shift policy; and engage board leadership to incorporate equity as a priority in foundation programming and operations.
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November 18-19, 2021

  • From Crisis to Care: Decriminalizing Mental Illness and Addiction
    For far too long, behavioral health crises have been treated as a criminal justice problem instead of a public health issue. As a result, jails and prisons have become our largest psychiatric facilities and communities of color have been disproportionately harmed by the criminalization of mental illness and drug use. Across the country, there are growing calls to reform our crisis response systems by prioritizing harm reduction; implementing alternatives to incarceration; and utilizing mental health providers, not law enforcement, as first responders to behavioral health challenges. Policy and practice changes at the local, state, and federal level are redesigning crisis systems to respond to behavioral health needs more effectively and equitably. In this programming series, participants will hear about community-centered decriminalization efforts; explore lessons learned from partnership work; and discuss how philanthropy can best support equitable and sustainable strategies
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November 19, 2021