While this year has been challenging in many ways, our team is grateful for another year filled with meaningful work and partnerships. As 2025 comes to a close, we reflect on innovative projects that highlight our work across CCHE’s five focus areas. We look forward to continuing our efforts in the new year, using data and insights to strengthen programs and initiatives that aim to improve health and support the well-being of communities across the United States. Please read on for highlights of projects that wrapped up in 2025.
People with low incomes and from racial/ethnic minority groups regularly face barriers to accessing primary care and behavioral health care. These obstacles include limited provider networks, challenges finding language-concordant providers, and challenges accessing the technology needed to take advantage of telehealth.
EQuIP-LA was a two-year collaborative that supported 31 small, independent practices in Los Angeles serving over 50,000 Medi-Cal patients. With funding, coaching, and data support, practices improved outcomes in blood pressure control, diabetes care, and cancer screening—demonstrating how targeted investment and health equity–focused QI can strengthen California’s safety net.
August 31 marks International Overdose Awareness Day, a global campaign to end overdoses, remember loved ones who have been harmed and died from drug overdose, and support families and friends impacted by substance use. Overdose continues to affect communities nationwide, but dedicated partners and innovative strategies make a difference.
Debates about systems and policies that support public health, health care, and social services in the United States are more intense and consequential than at any time in recent memory. Federal systems and staff are changing at an unprecedented pace. As we negotiate policy, systems, and environmental work, it is more important than ever to understand promising strategies and barriers to promote, initiate and defend policies, so that they can reach their intended impact
Online tool facilities identification of community needs: Our team developed a Community Health data platform for Kaiser Permanente, to facilitate identification of significant health needs. It uses publicly available data on health factors and health outcomes, with an emphasis on social and environmental determinants of health. The data platform includes 85 measures organized across 16 health topics based on the County Health Rankings population health framework.
In 2019, CCHE began our partnership with the Cooperative Extension System to evaluate its Well Connected Communities (WCC) initiative. WCC was part of a nine-year, $16.8 million investment by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to advance health equity and well-being efforts across the system. WCC aimed to leverage Extension’s expansive reach and long history working at national, state, and local levels to catalyze systems change, build capacity, and help ensure that everyone has an equal opportunity to live a better, healthier life.
CCHE partnered with the California Health Care Foundation to create an evaluation toolkit for tech partners who are interested in partnering with healthcare organizations to pilot and evaluate new services and products. Evaluation is a powerful tool for digital health companies to demonstrate impact, enhance program design, and strengthen their value proposition for fundraising and sales efforts. The goal is to provide a structured approach to evaluation with special attention to health equity and Medicaid populations. The toolkit includes evaluation fundamentals, suggested structure to build one’s own evaluation, and tools and resources for conducting an evaluation.
Housing insecurity affects millions of Americans, with many families only one financial crisis away from homelessness. Innovative, cross-sector solutions are needed, especially those integrating housing support with other social and health services. Medical-legal partnerships (MLPs) offer a promising approach that healthcare systems can use to support those who are housing insecure. CCHE recently published our learnings about Kaiser Permanente’s MLP in Health Services Research.