Health Systems Research for Equity includes grants from numerous Robert Wood Johnson Foundation research programs, including Community Research for Health Equity, Research in Transforming Health and Health Care Systems, and Building Trust and Mutual Respect to Improve Health Care.
The goal of this community-based participatory action research study is to expose racist, ableist, and culturally biased systems that lead to poor health outcomes for Black, Indigenous, People of Color with Disabilities (BIPOC-PWD) in Springfield, MA, and that prevent them from living meaningful independent lives in the community of their choice.
The goal of the study is to collect health status data among marginalized Native American communities within the Delmarva region along the east coast to inform health system approaches for addressing the physical, social, and mental health needs of these communities.
The goal of the study is to assess how West Virginia compiles and reports health surveillance data in order to build a more inclusive surveillance system.
The goal of the study is to develop a series of recommendations for health care providers, policymakers, and language justice advocates nationally, from immediate steps to improve current language services, to setting the gold standard for a language justice-based model to implement long-term.
The goal of the study is to determine the impact of implicit bias and perceived discrimination on accessibility and availability of health care services among African American women between the ages of 18 and 44 in Mississippi.
The goal of the study is to explore the unique challenges that Muslims in South East Michigan face in accessing health care and within the health care system, while also examining potential solutions that lead to equitable, less biased health care.
The goal of the study is to examine the circumstances which initiate health care disparities for the LGBTQ+ community and explore what options can mitigate consequences from care that is delayed or withheld entirely.
The goal of the study is to examine how providing skills, knowledge, and resources to those impacted by reproductive health issues in the Tulsa area works to influence health system policy.