Thursday, April 12, 2018

NY Comunity-Based Organizations Call on City to Increase Funding for Health Outreach


New York, NY — Access Health NYC, a city-council funded initiative that supports community-based organizations (CBOs) providing education, outreach, and assistance to New Yorkers in need of health care and coverage, launched its multi-language Guide to Your Health Care Rights & Options, a community education guide detailing key health access and coverage topics for immigrant and underserved communities such as Emergency Medicaid, language access, paying hospital bills, and more.
Led by the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families (CACF), Commission on the Public’s Health System (CPHS), Community Service Society of New York (CSS), FPWA, and the New York Immigration Coalition (NYIC), Access Health NYC agencies and dozens of city organizations also call on New York City Council officials to increase the initiative’s funding from $1 million to $2.5 million for the 2018-2019 fiscal year, which would go towards funding both current member organizations and helping more groups serve vulnerable New Yorkers.
“Quality healthcare is a right but rarely a norm for many New Yorkers,” said FPWA CEO and Executive Director Jennifer Jones-Austin. “Access Health NYC’s partner organizations have the trust of their communities and make every effort to connect New Yorkers to the health services they deserve. Culturally and linguistically appropriate outreach tools are key to reaching the immigrant, LGBTQ, and low-income populations needing coverage. It is critical that New York City continue to lead the nation in ensuring healthcare coverage for its most vulnerable given the policy disruptions at the federal level.”
Now in its third year, the initiative developed its Guide to Your Health Care Rights & Options community education guide to ensure more culturally responsive and linguistically appropriate health access resources are available to New Yorkers. The guide is now available in English, Spanish, Chinese, Korean, Arabic, Haitian Creole, Russian, Urdu, and Bengali. Awardee agencies say that with more funding, additional resources could be created for a wider range of communities.
"Health care access is a human right,” said Council Member Carlos Menchaca. “New York City's vulnerable communities deserve health care outreach that is culturally competent and in the language(s) they speak. Community based organizations do that best and they need increased funding to make sure immigrants and low-income New Yorkers use all the health services available to them."
"Local initiatives like Access Health NYC have become more important than ever now that immigrants are in this period of stress and vulnerability from anti-immigrant federal policies. New York City officials, especially City Council Speaker Johnson and Councilmember Levine, have publicly committed to supporting our immigrant communities, and public education about health coverage must be part of this response”, said Steven Choi, executive director of NYIC. “Access Health NYC's ability to get accurate and timely health services information to immigrant New Yorkers is invaluable. Its funding must be enhanced to $2.5 million for the initiative to reach its full potential.”
Access Health NYC funding supports the work of the five lead organizations, as well as thirteen CBOs, numerous service providers and sites, and a consumer helpline working throughout the five boroughs to connect underserved populations to healthcare. Since its inception, Access Health NYC providers have hosted over 750 workshops with over 10,000 New York residents in attendance and given over 10,000 referrals to New York City’s various social and human service provider resources.
"Despite the gains of the Affordable Care Act, New York City's Asian Pacific American (APA) community - a vast majority of whom are foreign-born - remains uninsured,” said Coalition for Asian American Children and Families Co-Executive Director Anita Gundanna. “Our communities lack access to insurance and health care services because critical health-related information is not language accessible or culturally competent. APA-serving community-based organizations rely on Access Health NYC to support their critical work to fill in the gaps and ensure that all communities understand their rights to and options for quality health care."
“Community-based organizations are best positioned to reach New York’s remaining uninsured, an estimated 400,000 people,” said Elisabeth R. Benjamin, Community Service Society Vice President for Health Initiatives. “Increasing resources to Access Health NYC will enhance a strong community-based infrastructure to improve access to coverage and care for vulnerable New Yorkers, including the many immigrants who do not know that these programs exist or are afraid to use them.”
You may view the community education guides here.  
 
Source: Mercury

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