Direct Relief Aids Community Health Centers With $27.9 Million in Grants

Zufall Health Center staff conduct Covid-19 tests in a Direct Relief-provided medical tent. Zufall is among the 519 health centers to receive a grant through Direct Relief’s Covid-19 Fund for Community Health. (photo courtesy Zufall Health Center)

Six weeks after establishing the Covid-19 Fund for Community Health, Direct Relief has issued $27.9 million in grants to 519 nonprofit community health centers across the United States on the front lines of the Covid-19 pandemic, serving people and places disproportionately affected and at risk.

The financial support from Direct Relief aims to safeguard healthcare workers as they stretch to maintain essential health services while also playing critical public-health roles in the Covid-19 response within their communities.

A groundswell of public support from thousands of individuals, corporate leaders, and a cross-section of leading artists and professional athletes provided the financial resources that were deployed rapidly to the safety-net health centers.

A lead contribution of $10 million from 3M anchored the Covid-19 fund, with other extraordinary, spontaneous support coming from corporate leaders including Jack Dorsey and artists including Sean “Diddy” Combs, among others.

According to the National Association of Community Health Centers, the $27.9 million in grants announced today comprise the largest private donation received by Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) in the 55 years since the first community health centers were established in 1965 as part of the Johnson Administration’s War on Poverty.

“We are grateful for this critical and immediate support as Community Health Centers work hard to keep communities safe during an unprecedented pandemic,” said Tom Van Coverden, President & CEO of the National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC). “We are also deeply appreciative of our longstanding partnership with Direct Relief in these uncertain times and their efforts to ensure that health centers confronting multiple challenges in underserved communities have the resources when and where they need them. We know that many donors and contributors have helped to make this fund possible, and we further extend our appreciation to all of them.”

More than 29 million of the country’s most vulnerable residents rely on local nonprofit community health centers for health care. FQHCs serve 1 in 11 U.S. residents, including 1 in 3 individuals living in poverty, 1 in 5 Medicaid beneficiaries, 1 in 5 rural Americans, and 1 in 9 children. Nationally, 63 percent of FQHC patients are members of ethnic and racial minority groups.

Direct Relief awarded individual grants of up to $50,000 to 513 FQHCs (full list available here) in 49 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. In addition, larger grants of up to $500,000 were made to six health centers that are in Covid-19 hot spots, have expanded activities related to Covid-19 care, and serve communities of color that have been disproportionately affected by the virus.

The health centers include:

“For Direct Relief, it’s profoundly inspiring to see the depth of concern and uncommon generosity from so many people of all backgrounds in our country — and a high privilege to connect those kind acts directly to the people and communities who need them most during this difficult, scary time,” said Thomas Tighe, Direct Relief President and CEO. “A pandemic puts everyone at risk, but some more so than others. The financial support here is so urgently needed to address critical health needs for people and communities most at risk, but the fact that the money came from so many people and reflects their concern and simple desire to help is a very powerful message and boost, too.”

In addition to community health centers, the Covid-19 Fund for Community Health is supporting free and charitable clinics and pharmacies that operate 1,400 service locations and serve 2 million patients who are among the most vulnerable members of U.S. society. The fund has donated an additional $1 million to the National Association of Free & Charitable Clinics, building on the $1 million donated earlier in April.

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