RI Foundation Awards $280K in Grants to 5 Nonprofits to Improve Health of Rhode Islanders

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RI Foundation Awards $280K in Grants to 5 Nonprofits to Improve Health of Rhode Islanders

PHOTO: RI Foundation
The Rhode Island Foundation announced that five nonprofit organizations will receive almost $280,000 in grants to help improve the health of Rhode Islanders.

The grant recipients are the Comprehensive Community Action Program (CCAP) in Cranston, Hasbro Children’s Hospital, the Rhode Island Center for Justice, Thundermist Health Center and the VNA of Care New England.

“Developing an inclusive primary care system that promotes healthy lives is one of our core strategic initiatives. These grants will advance our continuing efforts to make quality health care more accessible and affordable,” said Neil Steinberg, the Foundation’s president, and CEO.

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The grants will be used for everything from launching urges care pediatric psychiatric clinics to training nurses to deliver home health care.

The Foundation awarded the grants through a fund created in partnership with Harvard Pilgrim Health Care in 2010.

The Awardees

CCAP received $75,000 to provide health services to people who are homeless. Patients will be assessed for needs and connected to services with an emphasis on housing supports, job training, and placement.

Hasbro Children’s received $55,000 to launch PediBridge, an urgent care pediatric psychiatric clinic, to address the growing pediatric mental health needs of patients arriving through the hospital’s emergency department (ED). Hasbro Children’s is the only Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center in Rhode Island and has one of the busiest EDs in the region. In just the last two years, the number of behavioral health patients presenting at the hospital’s ED has increased 48 percent.

The Rhode Island Center for Justice received $55,000 to add legal services to the Providence Community Health Centers (PCHC). The work will include training PCHC staff on the services, and integrating on-site legal teams at the community health centers to provide legal advice and representation to patients.

Thundermist received $50,000 to support trauma-informed care in Woonsocket. Two behavioral health clinicians will receive training and a certification in providing trauma-informed care. The training will provide the clinicians with an understanding of the vulnerabilities or triggers of trauma survivors, so they can better provide services and programs that can be supportive and avoid re-traumatization. Grant funding will also support the addition of a case manager to help patients who have experienced trauma.

The VNA of Care New England received $44,705 to support its Nurse Residency Program, which provides recently graduated nurses with training in the specific skills that home health care requires and improves the retention of first-year nurses.


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