Chicago Department of Public Health hosts Healthy Chicago 2025 Symposium and Healthy Chicago Equity Zones Showcase
CDPH gathers with community partners to address racial life expectancy gap
Chicago Department of Public Health hosts
Healthy Chicago 2025 Symposium and
Healthy Chicago Equity Zones Showcase
Healthy Chicago 2025 Symposium and
Healthy Chicago Equity Zones Showcase
CDPH gathers with community partners to address
racial life expectancy gap
racial life expectancy gap
Healthy Chicago 2025 is the City’s community health improvement plan that outlines strategies to close the racial life expectancy gap. The plan calls upon the City and partners across sectors to support community organizations, particularly in Black and Latinx communities, as they take the lead on strategies that address the root causes of health inequities, including structural racism.
“Today, we are taking a moment to reflect on the progress made with partners across Chicago toward a city where all people, in all communities, have an opportunity to live full, healthy lives,” said Megan Cunningham, Managing Deputy Commissioner at CDPH. “And it’s about recommitting ourselves, our organizations, and our public institutions to continuing this essential work. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the critical importance of a strong, sustained public health system, and of sharing power with the people most affected by inequities – that’s what Healthy Chicago is all about.”
An example of the Healthy Chicago movement in action is the work of the Healthy Chicago Equity Zones (HCEZs). In 2020, CDPH allocated $9.6 million in COVID-19 relief funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to establish HCEZs - six geographic areas covering the entire city that are led by regional and community organizations.
The HCEZs are designed to advance the Healthy Chicago 2025 goal of closing the City’s racial life expectancy gap through hyperlocal strategies that confront social and environmental factors that contribute to racial and health inequities. Equity Zones ensure that community members have power and resources to identify local assets and challenges, and to develop solutions that meet their most pressing needs.
Through their work, over 25,000 Chicagoans received fentanyl test kits to prevent overdose, and more than 7,000 community surveys were conducted to understand local needs. Symposium sessions included one on community health assessments, others on the work of the CDPH Health Equity in All Policies program.
“HCEZs welcome a new era of collaboration between community organizers, nonprofit leaders, and CDPH leaders. These groups are meeting weekly to strategize on removing the systemic barriers that impede residents from leading healthy lives,” said Nancy Valentin, Director of Health Equity at the HCEZ regional lead organization, Northwest Center . “We have learned that when presented with evidence, community residents are empowered to take the lead in improving their own health and well-being. We look forward to many years of collaboration as we work together to move the needle forward and strengthen Chicago's public health workforce.”
Healthy Chicago 2025 invests funding, energy, and actions across seven city-wide priority areas that make a real difference in community health. Visit healthychicago.org to learn more and be a part of the movement, or watch the Symposium event livestream on CDPH social media pages.
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