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New Ascension Foundation to invest in organizations addressing health disparities
By JULIE MINDA
Ascension has launched its first national philanthropy. The Ascension Foundation is funding organizations and initiatives that address the root causes of health disparities and that promote health equity. Three academic institutions are the inaugural fund recipients.
Ascension did not disclose the dollar figures for the foundation’s allocations.
In a press release, the system said the foundation aims to support programs that have the potential to disrupt generational poverty, create pathways to economic stability for individuals and families and build a health care workforce that better reflects the diversity of the U.S. population.
In the announcement, Ascension Chief Executive Joseph Impicciche said the impetus for the foundation’s creation was Ascension’s recognition during the throes of the pandemic “that our nation’s health care disparities are wider and deeper than ever, and it will require largescale, national solutions if we are to truly improve the health of communities, particularly communities that have long been underserved.”
Impicciche said a hope is that the Ascension Foundation will “catalyze other health systems and organizations to also make long-term investments in eliminating health disparities and strengthening our communities.”
Leading the work is Robyn Kress, senior vice president of Ascension Foundation. There are six dedicated foundation staff including Kress. The foundation is governed by a three-member board and has six advisers including Impicciche to provide input on the collaborations the foundation is considering.
Gene Ford, senior director of public relations, marketing and communications at Ascension, said the foundation selected the trio of academic institutions as its first funding recipients based on how successful they’ve been to date in developing, supporting and promoting health equity.
Ascension is allotting the three initial grants for a three-year term.
Girls’ middle school
Recipient Marian Middle School is in St. Louis, where Ascension is based. Seven communities of Catholic sisters founded the school in 1999. Marian President Mary Elizabeth Grimes said the school provides faith-based education to adolescent girls who have a high academic potential and come from families of limited means.
According to Ascension’s release, Marian has helped disrupt poverty by guiding its students to career success. Some Ascension employees are Marian alumnae.
The school has what Ascension describes as a rigorous academic program that incorporates science, technology, engineering and math as well as an enrichment program promoting leadership and self-discovery.
The students’ families pay tuition on a sliding scale based on family income. Grimes said Ascension Foundation’s grant will support a fund that subsidizes tuition costs for students. The foundation also is providing funds for Marian’s graduate support program. That program offers students academic, social and financial support during high school and college and as they pursue a career. Marian’s graduate support directors provide students with mentoring and resources through high school and college, and into career success.
Ascension Foundation also is enabling students and their families to purchase lowcost prescription drugs through the Ascension Rx program, which offers medications, often at discounted rates, through a partnership between Ascension and Walgreens. Ford said that while many Marian families have drug coverage through Medicaid, not all do.
Medical college in Nashville
The second fund recipient is Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, where Ascension has a network of health care facilities. Meharry is one of the oldest historically Black academic health sciences centers in the U.S. and is a leading educator of Black medical doctors, dentists and biomedical scientists. According to information from the college, Meharry has trained 14% of all Black physicians and 27% of all Black dentists practicing in the U.S. Meharry also is a top educator of Black biomedical doctors of philosophy in the U.S.
Affiliated with the United Methodist Church, Meharry is “particularly well known for its uniquely nurturing, highly effective education programs; emerging prominence in health disparities research; culturally sensitive, evidence-based health services; and significant contribution to the diversity of the nation’s health profes- sions workforce,” according to Ascension’s release.
Ford said Meharry focuses on service to communities of color and low-income communities. According to information from Meharry, many of the school’s medical and dental students work in a clinic for the medically underserved and many dental students take part in a day of free oral health care for low-income people. The college provides about $29 million in uncompensated medical and dental care to low-income people annually. And about 83% of alumni physicians and dentists practice in underserved areas.
Ascension Foundation funds will help to cover stipends for lodging, travel and equipment for Meharry students undertaking clinical rotations at Ascension hospitals. This includes surgery rotations in Indianapolis. Ascension also is providing medical education scholarships for four Meharry students each year. And the foundation is investing in Meharry’s middle school pipeline programs.
School of medicine in Detroit
Ascension Foundation’s grant to Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit will provide tuition support for students of the school’s Med-Direct and post baccalaureate programs.
Med-Direct is for high-performing high school students who wish to pursue medical careers in a program that addresses health disparities. The students are accepted into the program as undergraduates and are guaranteed acceptance to the medical school if certain baseline measures are met, according to information from the medical school. jminda@chausa.org
Ascension has an extensive presence in Detroit. The Ascension Foundation may facilitate clinical rotations at Ascension facilities for students in the Med-Direct program.
Wayne State’s post baccalaureate program provides students who have completed an undergraduate degree with academic support and wraparound services that enable them to prepare for medical school and a career in medicine. According to Ascension, a goal of the post baccalaureate program is to build a pipeline of physicians dedicated to caring for medically underserved populations and communities.
Ascension plans to measure the impact of the foundation’s investments by gauging to what degree the diversity of the health care workforce increases and to what extent social determinants of health are addressed among high-risk populations in the communities Ascension serves.
For future grant allocations, Ascension Foundation said it plans to identify additional organizations that are well established and have had success addressing disparities in their communities, align well with the foundation’s focus areas, and share Ascension’s values. Ascension wants to invest in organizations or initiatives that can be scaled for greater impact. Recipients do not have to be located in Ascension service areas.
From page 1 the aging sisters, but we also realized that some students at Mount Mary University may be single moms who don’t have a lot of resources available.”
Fulcher added that as his board considered an intergenerational living arrangement, they recognized that “a tight-knit community with mentoring and a shared sense of purpose” could benefit single mothers, older adults including couples and singles, and the sisters.
“In our research though, we were hardpressed to find a truly intergenerational retirement community that is doing what we’re doing,” he said. “It would be great if Trinity Woods could serve as model.”
Comfort in community
The $45 million complex was a design challenge for the architects, Fulcher said. “We’ve got a chapel, a fitness center, an outdoor courtyard, a day care center, a beauty salon and a community dining room that accommodates high chairs for babies and seating for adults. We made sure the residential living areas for the students and their children are secure, and now we’re working on ways to engage everyone — music concerts, art classes, happy hours and Sunday night movies for kids.”
Trinity Woods has 52 independent living and assisted living units for the Sisters of Notre Dame, 90 market-rate independent living apartments for individuals and couples 55 and older and 24 furnished units for single mothers enrolled at Mount Mary University and their children under the age of 12.
The units for students and children measure 656 square feet, with two bedrooms, a living room, a bathroom and a small kitchenette with a refrigerator and microwave oven. Each floor has a laundry room and a lounge with a television and a stove. The students pay $1,200 a month, which includes meal plans for moms and their children, utilities and parking. As of late January, eight single mothers were in residence, with 11 children among them. Five graduate students who live at Trinity Woods do not have children.
Miya D. Rogers, 35, is one of the moms. A doctoral student at Mount Mary, she is in her second year working toward a degree in counselor education and supervision. A licensed professional counselor who previously worked in South Carolina, Rogers also teaches part time at the university. She moved in with her two young boys in January 2022.
“When I toured Trinity Woods, I determined it was a good fit for me and my sons. I wanted some stability, a place to call our own, a safe and loving environment,” she said. “I love living here among people who have so much wisdom and so much life experience — it’s a total blessing. We all can learn from one another, and I hope more communities become more open to this kind of opportunity.”
Diana Fontanez, 28, and her daughter moved in in August. She is a junior at Mount Mary, studying communications. “We are so blessed to live here,” she said. “I’ve had time to talk with some of the sisters at lunch, and that’s had a big impact on me. One told me she used to be a first grade teacher, and I was able to ask her questions about my daughter and my fears about doing the right thing. The sister was able to ground me, and reminded me my daughter is so lucky to have a mom like me. A weight lifted off me that day.”
Fontanez’s daughter also gets support from the other residents. “She is close to another child here, and has a bond with a mom and her son, who is 2. The sisters all praise her for helping him,” she said. “And when we see some of the senior residents, it’s wonderful the way they greet us and chitchat with us, ask us how it’s going.”
Marguerite Guy, 78, and Katie Lisa, 77, are two of the seniors who moved to Trinity Woods because of its intergenerational component. Together with residents June McClain and Carol Fibich, the women come up with ways to mix the generations and brighten the days of the single mothers and their children.
“The mission here appealed to me,” said Guy, a retired schoolteacher and principal who moved in almost a year ago. “This seemed like a perfect place for me, and I decided I wanted to be a part of this wonderful ministry,” she said. “I’m already like a grandma in the lives of many moms, and I also work with young adults in my church.”
Guy said the residents’ committee she is active on is planning to provide welcome baskets for the moms with cleaning products, toiletries and other essentials. The committee set up an “angel tree” for Christmas. “The moms put their names on it and listed whatever gifts they or their children would like,” she said. All of the mothers received a few small gifts as well as a handmade quilt, which had been donated by residents and people from the area who heard about the angel tree.
Trinity Woods seniors bought toys and knit blankets for all the children. There were hand knitted hats and scarves for moms and kids.
Last month the residents committee hosted its first tea to give the seniors and their young neighbors an opportunity to socialize. This month it will host a tea at the university that is open to all students.
Lisa and Guy both said they look forward to learning about the students’ career choices and goals in life and sharing some things about themselves.
“I wanted to live in a community where I would find purpose and meaning in the last chapter of my life,” said Lisa, a retired social worker. “I’m healthy, I’m active and I’m interested in people, interested in making connections. We have so much to offer each other.”