Skip to content
Grantmakers In Health
  • About
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Mission and Values
    • Join Our Team
    • Annual Reports & Form 990s
  • Our Work
    • Focus Areas
      • Health Equity and Social Justice
      • Access and Quality
      • Community Engagement and Empowerment
      • Philanthropic Growth and Impact
      • Population Health
    • Policy and Advocacy
    • Learning Communities
    • Strategic Plan
    • Strategic Guidance
    • Terrance Keenan Institute for Emerging Leaders
    • Awards
  • Publications
    • News and Updates
    • GIH Bulletin
      • GIH Bulletin Signup
    • Health Policy Update
    • Reports and Surveys
    • Grantmaker Profiles
    • Views from the Field
    • Issue Focus
    • Editorial Submission Guidelines
  • Events
    • GIH Annual Conference
    • Webinars
    • Meetings and Conferences
  • Resources
    • Trustee Resources
    • Philanthropy Careers
      • Submit a Position
    • Health Philanthropy Search
    • Directory of Philanthropy Consultants
  • Partner With GIH
  • Support GIH
  • Funding Partner Portal
  • Philanthropy Careers
  • Contact GIH
    • Funding Partner Portal
    • Partner Directory
  • Funding Partner Portal
  • Partner Directory
Sign In
Grantmakers In Health
  • Philanthropy Careers
  • Contact GIH
  • Bulletin Signup
  • About
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Mission and Values
    • Join Our Team
    • Annual Reports & Form 990s
  • Our Work
    • Focus Areas
      • Health Equity and Social Justice
      • Access and Quality
      • Community Engagement and Empowerment
      • Philanthropic Growth and Impact
      • Population Health
    • Policy and Advocacy
    • Learning Communities
    • Strategic Plan
    • Strategic Guidance
    • Terrance Keenan Institute for Emerging Leaders
    • Awards
  • Publications
    • News and Updates
    • GIH Bulletin
      • GIH Bulletin Signup
    • Health Policy Update
    • Reports and Surveys
    • Grantmaker Profiles
    • Views from the Field
    • Issue Focus
    • Editorial Submission Guidelines
  • Events
    • GIH Annual Conference
    • Webinars
    • Meetings and Conferences
  • Resources
    • Trustee Resources
    • Philanthropy Careers
      • Submit a Position
    • Health Philanthropy Search
    • Directory of Philanthropy Consultants
  • Partner With GIH
  • Support GIH
  • Funding Partner Portal
  • Philanthropy Careers
  • Contact GIH
    • Funding Partner Portal
    • Partner Directory

Now More than Ever We Need Philanthropy to Prioritize Health Equity

From the President
Posted April 18, 2022
bulletin_apr22
Morgan-Hynd

Cara V. James, PhD, President and CEO, Grantmakers In Health

April marks National Minority Health Month. It is a time for us to educate ourselves on the health challenges facing communities of color and other vulnerable populations, and to reflect on the progress we have made towards advancing health equity and what more we must do to ensure everyone has a fair and just opportunity to be as healthy as possible. The origins of this observance date back more than 100 years, but it was officially recognized by Congress 20 years ago.

Two years ago, our collective was awakened to long-standing systemic inequities experienced by communities of color in every facet of life, including health. More people became familiar with the social determinants of health and understood their impact, and more people began to talk about intersectionality and structural racism. In response to this awareness, organizations from philanthropy to government issued statements denouncing racism; established or expanded programs focused on eliminating disparities; supported organizations led by people of color and supporting communities of color; established diversity, equity, and inclusion positions; sought to diversify their boards; sought to tackle structural racism; and more. A year later, we saw some commitments were not quite realized. Some expressed frustration that more progress had not been achieved, while others pointed out how difficult it would be to reverse decades of policy, practice, and culture.

Today, we find ourselves in a situation where many organizations are continuing to advance health equity, and national leadership continues to promote policies to reduce inequities, but man state and local leaders are resisting in louder and more disturbing ways. Banning the teaching of our country’s history in all its complexities; attacking critical race theory; removing books from libraries and school curricula that talk about race, sexual orientation; and gender identity; criminalizing parents and others seeking to support members of the LGBTQ community; attempting to disenfranchise voters; and limiting access to health care for women run counter to much we claim to value as a country and are having a disproportionately negative effect on communities of color and other vulnerable populations. Moreover, sweeping things under the rug or refusing to discuss them does not mean they do not exist, nor does it make them go away. These efforts will stifle progress towards advancing health equity and have long-lasting negative effects.

Two years ago, I wrote Enough is Enough: It is Time to Get Serious about Eliminating Racial Disparities. In it, I noted that change is hard, but it is possible if we work together, and that achieving health equity is a marathon, not a sprint. We are at another important inflection point on our health equity journey. As we did when the pandemic began, we need to recommit to making health equity a priority, strengthen the role of leadership, and commit to tackling the tough issues.

Health funders serve many critical roles for the communities they support. They help give visibility and support to some of the most vulnerable people, serve as a bridge between community and policymakers, bring together myriad stakeholders working to address important issues, and serve as leaders through their voice and the programs they choose to support. Now more than ever, we need health funders to leverage each of these roles to ensure that we do not lose the progress of the past two years, and that we do not revert to a time when racism, sexism, homophobia, and xenophobia were acceptable practice. As Barbara Mikulski said, “Each of us can make a difference. Together we make change.”

Focus Area(s): Health Equity and Social Justice

Related Topic(s): Civic Engagement, Health Equity
Share this

Newsletter Sign Up

Want to sign up for the GIH Bulletin? Click here to get on the list.

Explore Focus Areas

  • Health Equity and Social Justice
  • Community Engagement and Empowerment
  • Philanthropic Growth and Impact
  • Access and Quality
  • Population Health
  • Policy and Advocacy

Explore Topics

Access (287) Advocacy Strategies (241) Behavioral Health (201) Children and Families (210) Civic Engagement (149) Climate and Environmental Health (47) COVID-19 (146) Federal Policy (26) Governance and Operations (313) Health Equity (399) Healthy Eating and Active Living (158) Housing (20) Integrative Health (59) Journalism (5) Justice Reform (7) Messaging (9) Misinformation (12) Older Adults (135) Oral Health (54) Palliative Care (5) Policy Agenda (59) Public Health (6) Quality (189) Rural health (23) Social Determinants of Health (11) Trust-based Philanthropy (14) Trustee Resources (13) Violence Prevention (20) Workforce (17)

Join the largest national network of health funders.

GIH Funding Partners are a diverse constituency of over 200 informed, connected philanthropic organizations.

Join GIH
Navigation
  • About
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • Mission and Values
    • Join Our Team
    • Annual Reports & Form 990s
  • Our Work
    • Focus Areas
      • Health Equity and Social Justice
      • Access and Quality
      • Community Engagement and Empowerment
      • Philanthropic Growth and Impact
      • Population Health
    • Policy and Advocacy
    • Learning Communities
    • Strategic Plan
    • Strategic Guidance
    • Terrance Keenan Institute for Emerging Leaders
    • Awards
  • Publications
    • News and Updates
    • GIH Bulletin
      • GIH Bulletin Signup
    • Health Policy Update
    • Reports and Surveys
    • Grantmaker Profiles
    • Views from the Field
    • Issue Focus
    • Editorial Submission Guidelines
  • Events
    • GIH Annual Conference
    • Webinars
    • Meetings and Conferences
  • Resources
    • Trustee Resources
    • Philanthropy Careers
      • Submit a Position
    • Health Philanthropy Search
    • Directory of Philanthropy Consultants
  • Partner With GIH
  • Support GIH
  • Funding Partner Portal
  • Philanthropy Careers
  • Contact GIH
    • Funding Partner Portal
    • Partner Directory
Contact

1100 Connecticut Avenue NW
Suite 1100
Washington, DC 20036

202.452.8331

Email GIH

Press Contact

Annual Reports and Form 990s

Connect

LinkedIn

Facebook

Instagram

Youtube

Threads

Stay Informed

Sign up for the GIH Bulletin and other announcements

Search

© 2025 Grantmakers In Health | Privacy Policy

Website hosted by Yoko Co

Scroll To Top