The ballot measure process gives marginalized communities a direct way to shape policies that affect their health and ...
Through the public comment process, we are working to ensure that our laws and policies give everyone—regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, class, or disability—a fair and just opportunity to reach ...
We all deserve to live in a world where health is not a privilege, but a right. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) recognized the considerable impact of five federal regulations, or rules, and ...
Whether we're young or old, part of the sandwich generation or child-free, care is universal. In this seven-part series, actress and caregiver Yvette Nicole Brown looks at caregiving over the course ...
Equity and overall wellbeing are not generally part of how we talk about health, and are not emphasized in our data collection. This has to change in order to truly move the needle on health equity ...
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Award for Health Equity celebrates individuals who have changed systems and policies at a local level to increase the chance that everyone has a fair and just ...
Our Board of Trustees is composed of leaders from a variety of sectors and communities, who set policies that advance RWJF’s work to take bold leaps and pave the way together to a future where health ...
What can we do today to create a healthier, more equitable tomorrow? New technologies, scientific discoveries and cultural shifts are redefining our future. We work with pioneering scientists, ...
Through tall cedar and fir trees on Eagle Hill, Charlene Nelson can spot the distant homes of the Shoalwater Bay Indian Reservation. If all goes as planned, those dwellings will someday move to this ...
Traumatic childhood events such as abuse, neglect, and witnessing experiences like crime, parental conflict, mental illness, and substance abuse can result in long-term negative effects on learning, ...
Paving the way, together, to a future where health is no longer a privilege, but a right.