Second quarter 2016 grants: an additional $14.5 million to California’s community health centers and domestic violence providers

Value-based care and patient engagement

  • California Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems ($200,000) - To prepare public hospital systems for success beyond the Medi-Cal 2020 Waiver.
  • California Department of Health Care Services ($58,500) - To support the California Department of Health Care Services Academy.
  • The California Health Care Safety Net Institute ($125,000) - To advance ambulatory and value-based care in public hospitals and health systems.
  • Kaiser Family Foundation ($350,000) – To fund the Kaiser Health News California Bureau & state and local coverage of healthcare issues.
  • Insure the Insured Project ($350,000) - To inform progress and opportunities in a post-ACA healthcare environment.
  • JSI Research & Training Institute, Inc. ($150,952) – To support the implementation of California’s FQHC Payment Reform Pilot.
  • Tides Center ($3,250,000) - To support the Center for Care Innovations' project to scale innovation in California’s healthcare safety net.
  • 2016 Payment Reform Pilot Program Support for Federally Qualified Health Centers ($1,250,000) – To support Federally Qualified Health Centers implementing Prospective Payment System pilots.

Domestic violence systems and survivor experience

  • California Department of Public Health ($600,000) - To launch Phase II of the California Teen Dating Violence Prevention Initiative.
  • California Partnership To End Domestic Violence ($200,000) - To support planning for the “Shifting The Narrative: Art as Liberation” project.
  • California Partnership To End Domestic Violence ($410,514) - To drive systems-level impact through collaboration, policy, and dissemination of new learning and promising practices.
  • Community Partners ($50,000) - To support the Violence Prevention Coalition of Greater Los Angeles' project to disseminate data and build consensus on complex violence prevention and intervention approaches.
  • East Los Angeles Women’s Center ($200,000) - To scale the Culturally Responsive Domestic Violence Network: Promotoras Contra La Violencia Collectives.
  • Futures Without Violence ($300,000) - To align trauma-informed practices and policy opportunities in childhood wellness systems.
  • Sacred Heart Community Services ($157,500) - To build the capacity of domestic violence survivors to lead community organizing campaigns in Santa Clara County.
  • Women’s Foundation of California ($150,000) - To activate the Women's Policy Institute's alumni network to address domestic violence issues in California.
  • 2016 Domestic Violence Systems of Care + Survivor Experience Core Support Initiative ($1,925,000) - To provide flexible core operating funds to California's domestic violence service providers.

Care integration

  • Prevention Institute ($266,500) - To move upstream in the prevention of complex medical and behavioral health conditions.

The remaining uninsured

  • California Community Foundation ($400,000) - To support education, outreach, and enrollment activities that help undocumented children enroll in full-scope Medi-Cal coverage.
  • California Coverage and Health Initiatives ($600,000) - To support education, outreach, and enrollment activities that help undocumented children enroll in full-scope Medi-Cal coverage.
  • The Children’s Partnership ($497,619) - To support education, outreach, and enrollment activities that help undocumented children enroll in full-scope Medi-Cal coverage.
  • 2016 Community Health Center Core Support Initiative ($2,480,000) - To provide flexible core operating funds to safety net providers across the state.

Emerging opportunities

  • Grantmakers in Health ($75,000) - To share learning and engage national funders.
  • San Diego Grantmakers ($75,000) - To support the Collaborative Philanthropy Project.
  • San Francisco General Hospital Foundation ($200,000) - To implement patient-centered approaches to chronic pain self-management and medication use in safety net hospitals.
  • Southern California Grantmakers ($100,000) - To build open-source philanthropic practices among funders in California.
  • The Regents of the University of California, San Francisco ($65,000) - To pilot symptom-identification trauma screening for youth in the San Francisco Bay Area.

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