UnitedHealthcare Awards More Than $276,000 in Maternal Health Grants to Six Community Organizations in Tennessee
UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Tennessee is allocating over $276,000 in maternal health grants to six organizations aimed at enhancing maternal health outcomes and reducing disparities. The recipients include BSTARS, Catholic Charities of West Tennessee, Community Alliance for the Homeless, Mother to Mother, Nashville Diaper Connection, and SisterReach. The initiative arises amidst rising concerns about adverse maternal outcomes, particularly among Black women, with Tennessee ranking poorly in low birth weight and preterm births. This is part of UnitedHealthcare's larger commitment to address maternal health across the U.S.
- UnitedHealthcare is investing over $276,000 in maternal health grants, supporting local organizations.
- Grants target crucial areas like breastfeeding, emergency shelters, and basic infant needs.
- Initiatives aim to improve adverse maternal outcomes, particularly for high-risk Black women.
- Tennessee ranks 41st in low birth weight infants at 9.3%, indicating significant public health concerns.
- The state's preterm birth rates have been increasing for three consecutive years, now at 11.2%.
UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Tennessee has awarded more than
“Pregnant women in the U.S. are increasingly experiencing adverse maternal and birth outcomes, particularly Black women,” said Keith Payet, CEO, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Tennessee. “UnitedHealthcare believes that we must identify and support high-risk mothers early and throughout their care journey including after birth, through partnerships with national and local community-based organizations.”
The six grant recipients include:
-
BSTARS – Serving Memphis;
$5,000 t o support Black women who choose to breastfeed. -
Catholic Charities of West Tennessee, Inc. – Serving West Tennessee;
$40,200 t o fund personnel, food boxes and marketing materials to expand services to target Memphis residents. -
Community Alliance for the Homeless (CAFTH) – Serving Memphis and Shelby county;
$45,000 t o expand an emergency shelter program for households with children. -
Mother to Mother – Serving Nashville;
$65,964 t o purchase infant car seats, toddler car seats, cribs and strollers. -
Nashville Diaper Connection – Serving Nashville;
$45,000 t o purchase diapers and support program promotional materials. -
SisterReach – Serving Memphis;
$75,000 t o support housing, food, clothing, domestic violence prevention services, utility assistance and doula services.
“Nashville Diaper Connection's mission is to ensure that every baby in Nashville has enough diapers to remain clean, dry and healthy. We leverage Nashville Diaper Connection's partner network and our diaper donations to improve crucial maternal, infant and toddler health outcomes,” said Doug Adair, CEO and founder of Nashville Diaper Connection. “This maternal health grant allows us to better serve high-risk mothers and babies while working toward our goal of “No Child Wet Behind.”
"Centering the needs of women, mothers, children and families is central to what the reproductive justice framework was intended to accomplish. Ensuring that women and mothers can lead a healthy life, raise healthy families and live in compassionate and sustainable communities is not only our responsibility as human rights advocates, but as neighbors and servants in our community,” said Cherisse Scott, CEO and founder, SisterReach. “Our partnership with UnitedHealthcare allows us to address and provide some of the practical and immediate needs vulnerable people and families in Shelby County require. In March, we launched Pearl's Pantry, named in honor of my dearly departed mother. The program will feature a food pantry and clothes closet for the entire family. Participants will also be connected to other programs and resources SisterReach and our program partners provide."
Infants born preterm or with low birth weight are at an increased risk for experiencing physical disabilities and developmental impairments throughout their lives. According to America’s Health Rankings, the rate of Tennessee’s low birth weight infants (defined as less than 5
These grants are part of several initiatives that UnitedHealthcare, along with its parent company UnitedHealth Group, is launching to address maternal health outcomes throughout the United States, including over
UnitedHealthcare serves more than 1.3 million people in Tennessee enrolled in employer-sponsored, individual, Medicare and Medicaid benefit plans, with a network of 127 hospitals, and more than 35,000 physicians and other care providers statewide.
About UnitedHealthcare
UnitedHealthcare is dedicated to helping people live healthier lives and making the health system work better for everyone by simplifying the health care experience, meeting consumer health and wellness needs, and sustaining trusted relationships with care providers. In the United States, UnitedHealthcare offers the full spectrum of health benefit programs for individuals, employers, and Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, and contracts directly with more than 1.3 million physicians and care professionals, and 6,500 hospitals and other care facilities nationwide. The company also provides health benefits and delivers care to people through owned and operated health care facilities in South America. UnitedHealthcare is one of the businesses of UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH), a diversified health care company. For more information, visit UnitedHealthcare at www.uhc.com or follow @UHC on Twitter.
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FAQ
What is the purpose of UnitedHealthcare's $276,000 maternal health grants in Tennessee?
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