Note: This article is cross-posted on APHA’s Healthiest Cities and Counties Challenge Communities4Health blog and Healthy Places by Design’s blog.
The Healthiest Cities and Counties Challenge produced some fascinating successes during its two-year run, spearheaded by four national partners including our two organizations. A few recent highlights of the initiative to reduce local disparities in food and healthcare access in local communities are:
The initiative was the result of a partnership among Healthy Places by Design, the American Public Health Association, the Aetna Foundation (an independent charitable affiliate of CVS Health), and the National Association of Counties. It ran from spring 2020 until recently, overlapping the height of the pandemic and its unprecedented rates of food insecurity and worsening health disparities. Aetna Foundation and its partners awarded 10 cities and 10 counties with $100,000 over a two-year period. Lead agencies were non-profit organizations, academic institutions, and local governments and used the investment to work across disciplines and alongside residents and local leaders to improve health and wellbeing in their communities.
“Solutions and wisdom are abundant in communities,” said Lead Director of Community Impact and Philanthropic Partnerships at CVS Health Amy Clark. “The initiative had value for our participants and embodied a respectful and humble stance respective to community voice. And it is very exciting to see that so many projects are ending on a high note, whether it be receiving new grant funding, cementing a new partnership, or achieving a policy milestone.”
Clark offered some final insights to project teams—and organizers of other communities—as they continue their equity work: “Stay curious about how community change happens, and don’t be overwhelmed by all the work that you don’t control,” she said. “Focus on what you can influence today, and eventually you will see that your daily decisions have moved you into a space you could have never imagined a year ago.”