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RWJF Award for Health Equity

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Award for Health Equity celebrates individuals who have changed systems and policies at a local level to increase the chance that everyone has a fair and just opportunity to live the healthiest life possible. 

The program, which is coming to a close this year, supported national membership organizations from public health, healthcare, social justice, civic leadership, community development, education, planning, and philanthropy in recognition of their important work in the field. Those organizations found and selected changemakers in their community who are improving wellbeing for the people they serve. 

Prize Criteria

RWJF funded nine national membership organizations, representing varied sectors, to administer the awards program over seven years (2016–2022). 

Organizations include:

AIDS United

Asian & Pacific Islander Caucus for Public Health

Community-Campus Partnerships for Health

Hispanics in Philanthropy

Leading Age

National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics

National Civic League

National Recreation and Park Association

Youth MOVE National

Each organization independently nominated individuals and selected an award recipient (one individual or a team of two) for work done within a two year period. 

Visit each organization’s site to learn about their nomination/application process.

For more information on the prize and nomination process, download the FAQ PDF.

2022 Health Equity Award Winners

Celebrating the Winners

Join us in celebrating the winners of the 2022 RWJF Award for Health Equity. These individuals have successfully changed systems and local policies that help reduce health disparities in their communities to increase the chance for everyone to have a fair and just opportunity for health and wellbeing.

Shawn Fung-A-Ling

Shawn Fung-A-Ling, Deputy Director, I Am Human Foundation

Selected by AIDS United 

Building Understanding Between Providers and the LGBTQ Community

Shawn Fung-A-Ling, Deputy Director at the I Am Human Foundation, develops educational, outreach, corporate, and public health programs designed to ensure that trans and nonbinary people receive healthcare services and resources that others take for granted. Shawn has created effective measures that bridge the gaps in understanding between healthcare providers, nonprofit organizations, and the LGBTQIA+ community.  Learn more on YouTube.

Dr. Raynald Samoa

Dr. Raynald Samoa, Associate Clinical Professor, Department of Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolism, City of Hope National Medical Center 

Selected by the Asian & Pacific Islander Caucus for Public Health

Disaggregating Data to Reveal Real Needs 

Dr. Raynald Samoa actively engages researchers, physicians, public health experts, elected officials, and community advocates charged with serving and protecting Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) communities with the goal of achieving health equity. His efforts focus on using disaggregated data and providing educational platforms for NHPI medical providers and community advocates to increase resources and develop effective policies for the NHPI communities who, without these crucial elements, are often invisible and neglected by the health system. Learn more on YouTube.

Zea Malawa and Anu Manchikanti

Dr. Zea Malawa, Director, Expecting Justice
Dr. Anu Manchikanti Gomez, Associate Professor and Director, Sexual Health and Reproductive Equity Program, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley 

Selected by Community-Campus Partnerships for Health

Lessening Economic Stress to Support Healthy Births 

The Abundant Birth Project provides mothers a buffer against the stresses associated with racialized economic insecurity that contribute to adverse birth outcomes. Using a community-driven design approach, Drs. Zea Malawa and Anu Gomez co-led the coalition that brought this innovative initiative to life. Through an approach that supports the dignity, capability, and autonomy of expectant mothers, the program offers an unconditional income supplement that mothers can use to address their self-identified needs, an effective strategy in promoting healthy births.  Learn more on YouTube.

Lorena Quiroz

Lorena Quiroz, Founder and Executive Director, Immigrant Alliance for Justice and Equity

Selected by Hispanics in Philanthropy

Addressing Challenges Impacting Immigrant Workers in Mississippi

Lorena Quiroz is a longtime health advocate, organizer, interpreter, and doula who created the Immigrant Alliance for Justice and Equity (IAJE), an organization building an immigrant-led social-economic movement in Mississippi. She works at the grassroots to amplify the voices of multi-racial, intergenerational immigrant communities throughout the state and to meet the urgent needs of children and families. Learn more on YouTube.

Rhonda Breland-Gil

Rhonda Breland-Gil, Grants Manager, Wesley Woods Senior Living

Selected by Leading Age

Focusing on Mental Health to Improve Wellbeing for Older Adults 

Rhonda Breland-Gil suspected that unaddressed behavioral health issues, often due to adverse life events, were contributing to lower wellness scores among the residents of Branan Towers, a Wesley Woods Senior Living community. She challenged the assumption that these residents were not good candidates for psychotherapy and ushered in a program of on-site psychological services resulting in measurable improvements in resident wellbeing. Learn more on YouTube.

Nancy Lascheid

Nancy Lascheid, Co-Founder, Neighborhood Health Clinic

Selected by the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics

Providing a Safety Net for the Working Uninsured

Nancy Lascheid and her husband Dr. William P. Lascheid identified a need in Collier County when they retired. This need was medical care for lower income, working, uninsured adults through private philanthropy. With a mission to provide comprehensive healthcare with dignity and humanity for those with no other options, they founded Neighborhood Health Clinic in 1999, a free clinic with a volunteer base of 700 individuals donating their expertise, supported by fourteen full-time and four part-time paid staff. Learn more on YouTube.

Alma Stewart Allen

Alma Stewart Allen, President and Founder, Louisiana Center for Health Equity

Selected by the National Civic League

Improving Health Outcomes for Families from Under-Resourced Communities

Alma Stewart Allen is the founding President of the Louisiana Center for Health Equity (LCHE), addressing disparities in health and wellbeing attributed to structural, institutional, or social disadvantages across the state, and advancing their bold vision, LA40by2030, with a focus on women and children. In addition, Alma’s work has impacted hundreds of youth and households living in under-resourced communities through partnerships with more than twenty local, state, and community organizations. LCHE’S adolescent health work strives to curb youth violence through program and policy initiatives, advocating for behavioral health and education aimed at supporting the success of Louisiana’s youth. Learn more on YouTube.

Velma Bailey

Velma Bailey, Founder/CEO, Saint Louis Torchbearers 2 

Selected by the National Recreation and Park Association

Opening the World of Outdoor Wonder for Urban Youth 

Velma Bailey, a schoolteacher for 26 years and a community volunteer for most of her life, started Camp Sun Splash, a program of the grassroots non-profit Saint Louis Torchbearers 2. As a passionate advocate for inner city youth and developing future leaders, Velma opens doors to the wonders of the natural world for children with little experience of the outdoors, and for whom activities such as hiking, swimming, and environmental studies are life changing. Learn more on YouTube.

Elliott Hinkle

Elliott Orrin Hinkle, Principal and Founder, Unicorn Solutions LLC

Selected by Youth MOVE National

Creating Affirming and Safe Communities for LGBTQ+ Youth

Elliott Hinkle, principal at Unicorn Solutions, is a national advocate for the lives and futures of LGBTQ youth who are or have been in foster care. Elliott’s work focuses on research, policy, and practices that address the unmet needs of transgender youth and those impacted by child and youth-serving systems. Learn more on YouTube.

Past Health Equity Award Winners

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