October 29, 2008
Ten Extraordinary Americans Recognized for Local Innovation in Improving Health and Health Care
From: PR Newswire - Oct 29, 2008
PRINCETON, N.J. and SAN DIEGO, Oct 29, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Announces Winners of the 2008 Community Health Leaders Award
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) today announced the 2008 recipients of its Community Health Leaders (CHL) Award at its Annual Meeting in San Diego. The CHL Award honors unrecognized individuals who overcome daunting odds to improve the health and quality of life for underserved men, women and children in communities across the United States.
Now in its 15th year, the CHL awardees represent the geographical, cultural, ethnic, social and economic diversity of America. From providing deaf patients better access to medical care with interpreters, to giving low-income children a fair start on their education with eye exams, to violence prevention programs for teens, the awardees have dedicated themselves to tackling some of the most intractable problems affecting the health of their communities.
"The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is proud to recognize and honor these courageous individuals who are leading and shaping health care practice and health policy through local action," said Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, M.D., M.B.A., president and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. "These Community Health Leaders are truly unsung heroes who have stopped at nothing to help the people of their communities live healthier, better lives."
This year's winners join a distinguished and diverse group of 150 previous award recipients. The 2008 Community Health Leaders named today are:
1) STEPHEN BLACK, President & Founder of Impact Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama
Stephen Black, the grandson of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, was raised with a great sense of civic duty. So instead of pursuing a lucrative legal career in private practice after graduating from Yale Law School, he returned to his Alabama roots, believing he had an obligation and social responsibility to help the underserved in his community. In 2004, Black founded FocusFirst, where trained college students provide vision screenings to pre-school children throughout Birmingham, specifically in low-income areas. Black believes poor vision has an impact on how well the children perform academically. Since the program's launch, FocusFirst has provided free, technologically advanced vision screenings for more than 40,000 children in all 67 counties throughout the state, helping to ensure many of these children begin their education with appropriate vision care.
2) ANITA BUEL, Director, Deaf Community Health Worker Project, Inner Grove Heights, Minnesota
As a Deaf person, Anita Buel is well acquainted with the language, comprehension and communication barriers experienced by many in the same position when seeking medical care. Members of the Deaf community are often excluded from the national health agenda and are rarely mentioned when talking about people for whom spoken English is a second language.
After being diagnosed with advanced stage breast cancer as a young mother and not having adequate resources devoted to the Deaf community for her disease, Buel's leadership through the Deaf Community Health Worker program is responsible for training members of the Deaf community to help Deaf patients access medical services and understand medical issues in their language. Three years ago, a Deaf person with a serious health care problem had no support at the doctor's office. Today, thanks to Buel's efforts, Deaf Community Health Workers' services are now covered by Medical Assistance in Minnesota.
3) DEANN CANUTESON, President of the Full Life Corporation, Kealakekua, Hawaii
As a junior in high school, Deann Canuteson visited a residential care facility for people with developmental disabilities and was shocked at the way people lived. That visit so profoundly impacted Canuteson that she has dedicated her adult life to building a world where people with intellectual and physical disabilities have greater opportunities and can make their own decisions about every aspect of their lives. Through her work at Full Life Corporation on Hawaii's "Big Island," Canuteson's unrelenting advocacy has brought access to much-needed services previously not available for residents of the state. For example, today, approximately 2,500 people with developmental disabilities on the island of Hawaii now have access to services provided through the Medicaid Waiver Program.
4) SCOTT CHARLES, Trauma Outreach Coordinator, Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Scott Charles leads the "Cradle to Grave" program, an intervention program he developed to prevent youth violence at one of Philadelphia's busiest trauma centers. He takes the young people through a reenactment of the final day of a 16-year-old multiple gunshot victim -- from the moment he arrives at the trauma center to when his body is taken to the morgue. The goal: to see the real-life impact of getting shot -- not just the media images on TV and in movies. This program is a model for other trauma centers since it works to heal patients physically and spiritually. Charles also intervenes directly with gunshot patients while they are in the hospital since they have a one in seven chance of getting shot again.
5) JONATHAN DELMAN, Executive Director, Consumer Quality Initiatives, Roxbury, Massachusetts
Jonathan Delman has struggled with mental illness his entire adult life. Despite facing everyday stigmas surrounding his mental illness, Delman has chosen to help others like himself to improve their experiences. He founded Consumer Quality Initiatives, which partners with consumers and academics to conduct high-quality research on people's experiences with mental health services. He then provides the results to policy makers and service providers to help them improve services. His work has changed the way the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health cares for residents with mental health issues.
6) DONENE FEIST, State Director, Family Voices of North Dakota, Edgeley, North Dakota
Donene Feist's commitment to children with special health care needs goes beyond the Family Voices of North Dakota and into numerous communities across the state. She consistently collaborates with families and professional partners to improve the health and health care of children with special health care needs. She has found services for thousands of children with a wide range of complex health needs in a state with few urban centers. She assists families in navigating public and private health systems and insurance plans, and helps them find accurate information and resources for their children.
7) ZAID GAYLE, Executive Director, Peace4Kids, Compton, California
When Zaid Gayle was a teenager, he founded a youth group that promoted learning and self-expression. That experience launched Gayle into a lifetime of service. In 1998, he created Peace4Kids, a "community-as-family" safe haven for foster children in the violent Watts area of South Los Angeles. At Peace4Kids adult volunteers become a consistent presence in the children's lives. During the past four years, the program has grown from having no budget to having $1 million annually with 10 full-time staff members and nearly 100 adult volunteers. Gayle has also been a key influence in foster care reform in California.
8) JUDI HILMAN, Executive Director, Utah Health Policy Project, Salt Lake City, Utah
As a passionate and gifted community organizer, Judi Hilman has engaged a wide range of Utah residents in a variety of advocacy campaigns. From low-income and disabled persons, to small business owners, Hilman empowers those around her to use their voices to advocate for justice. Hilman co-founded the Utah Health Policy Project (UHPP) in 2006 to help obtain quality, affordable, comprehensive health care coverage for all Utah residents through research, policy advocacy and civic participation activities. Though UHPP is not designed to provide direct services, the agency receives multiple calls per month which are filtered through a safety net with the help of a resource guide that Hilman created. Today, UHPP helps hundreds of individuals each month learn about health policy issues and solutions, the policymaking process and how they can play a role.
9) RAY LOPEZ, Environmental Program Manager, Little Sisters of the Assumption (LSA) Family Health Service, Inc., New York, New York
Ray Lopez works with East Harlem residents to help combat environmental conditions affecting their health, including insect infestation, mold and poor air quality. He helps families control asthma triggers in their homes, reducing costly emergency room visits and school absences. He also developed solutions to the growing bedbug infestation in New York City, including wrapping duct tape around the edge of a cleaned mattress as a kind of sticky moat to prevent re-infestation. These approaches have directly helped hundreds of East Harlem residents resolve their own personal environmental health issues and created a ripple effect as they help relatives and neighbors. Under Lopez's leadership, LSA has become widely recognized for its environmental interventions, receiving the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Region 2 Environmental Quality Award for its asthma program, which Ray Lopez oversees.
10) MARIA RAMOS, Network Associate Director, Generations +/Northwestern Manhattan Health Network, New York, New York
Five years ago, Maria Ramos saw a need for health services among New York City's taxi and limousine drivers who frequently suffer from medical conditions as a result of their sedentary work and "on-the-go" eating habits. What began as an opportunity to bring healthcare to those living and working in Harlem and South Bronx communities, today provides healthcare services to drivers at 70 taxi bases across New York, where over 3,000 drivers and their families have access to care. Ramos and her outreach staff travel to area taxi bases daily, utilizing dispatch radios to announce the availability of services for that day. Most services are provided within an hour, which appeals to drivers, who average three customers within that time frame. Ramos' success has led to other projects, including a collaborative with the taxi bases and the Department of Aging to increase awareness of available healthcare services programs to seniors as she continues to find innovative efforts to meet the healthcare needs of New Yorkers.
For more information about the Community Health Leaders Award program, go to www.communityhealthleaders.org.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest philanthropy devoted exclusively to improving the health and health care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more than 35 years the Foundation has brought experience, commitment, and a rigorous, balanced approach to the problems that affect the health and health care of those it serves. When it comes to helping Americans lead healthier lives and get the care they need, the Foundation expects to make a difference in your lifetime. For more information, visit www.rwjf.org.
SOURCE Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
http://www.communityhealthleaders.org
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