Health Equity Policy Principles & Priorities

Advocates for Community Health envisions a health care system where all Americans have a fair and just opportunity to be healthy without impediment.

Achieving health equity means removing the barriers that prevent people from being healthy – systemic racism, poverty, and lack of access to economic mobility. Health centers strive for organizational equity, which includes staff that reflect the populations served, and governance that includes anti-racist policies and procedures. Health centers also strive for equity in care delivery, which means patients receive care that is culturally appropriate and based in trust.

Community health centers have been, and will continue to be, vital to achieving health equity in the United States. As hyper-local hubs providing consumer driven, comprehensive care, community health centers are crucial in narrowing health disparities, health centers build health equity in their approach and delivery of care, and through their governance and operational model, and investments in these centers has consistently resulted in impactful returns. With increased investment in health centers and clear measurement structures to track health equity outcomes, America can get closer to a reality where all citizens have access to quality, comprehensive health care.

Our Health Equity Principles

Our members have a proven track record of using evidence-based interventions to reduce health disparities.

CHCs serve primarily marginalized populations, including BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) individuals, underinsured or uninsured patients, veterans, and patients experiencing homelessness or living in low-income households.

CHCs are located in, and provide services to, communities designated as medically underserved.

We celebrate the intersectionality of identity. We honor overlapping and interrelated affiliations and acknowledge that our present systems can often exacerbate discrimination.

We keep health equity at the core of everything we do. We strive to have governance, staff, and strategic partnerships that reflect the diverse communities our members serve.

Our Health Equity Policy Priorities

  1. Advance the Health Center Community Transformation Hub Act, HR 1072. Sponsored by Representative Yvette Clarke (D-NY), this legislation creates a supplemental grant program to help health centers serve as a “hub” among local organizations to more effectively address the social determinants of health faced by patients.
  2. Provide flexible funding to federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) to implement programs proven to close health equity gaps. Rather than requiring specific programming, HRSA should implement a flexible funding stream for innovative programming with the sole goal of achieving more equitable care delivery.
  3. Support programming to address patients’ Health Related Social Needs. HRSA should include community-based organization (CBO) partnerships as an allowable expense under 330 grant funding. The Medicaid program should clarify that Medicaid MCOs can contract with FQHCs to serve a similar role.
  4. Develop, test, and disseminate health equity measurement tools. Identify health equity measurements, pilot those measurement processes, and deploy comprehensive measurement processes across the health care system.
  5. Integrate health equity into evaluation and payment for health centers. Integrate validated health equity measurement into performance metrics for value-based care models. Measurement tools should evolve to acknowledge intersectional identities and include measurement of the diversity of the health care workforce.
Committed to community, with a visionary and innovative approach, our membership is leading the way in shaping the rapidly evolving health care landscape of the future. Learn more about our other policy priorities and our advocacy efforts.
Copyright © 2024 Advocates for Community Health Privacy Policy