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January 29, 2007
Contact: Bev
Pfeifer-Harms
Director of Communications
314.345.5500 office
Missouri Foundation for Health
Tops $200 Million in Grantmaking
St. Louis -
In just five years of grantmaking, the Missouri Foundation
for Health (MFH) has surpassed the $200 million mark in funding.
By the end of 2006, MFH has funded 976 grants totaling $207.6
million to nonprofit organizations in Missouri.
Created in 2000 from the conversion of Blue Cross/Blue Shield
of Missouri, MFH began making grants in 2002. MFH is the largest
non-governmental funder of community health activities in
Missouri and is dedicated to serving the uninsured, the underinsured
and the underserved in its service area. That area includes
84 Missouri counties and the City of St. Louis. It does not
include the Kansas City area and northwest Missouri. MFH's
current assets stand at $1.3 billion, making it the 3rd largest
health care foundation in the U.S. and the 2nd largest health
care conversion foundation in the U.S.
"We are very pleased with the impact MFH has made in
just five years of grantmaking," says Dr. James R. Kimmey,
MFH's president and CEO. "We see on an almost daily basis
how the organizations that we support are impacting the communities
they serve, by helping Missourians to live healthier and by
working to ensure our residents have access to needed health
care."
MFH provides funding in several critical health care areas.
Its three long-term funding efforts are: Tobacco Prevention
and Cessation Initiative, a nine-year, $40 million funding
effort to reduce the use of tobacco products through regional
and community efforts; Healthy & Active Communities Initiative,
a multi-year funding effort to address the prevalence of obesity
in Missouri and to encourage healthy eating and lifestyles;
and Primary Care Access Initiative, a new funding effort launched
in 2006 that focuses on strengthening the health care safety
net and improving access to health care in rural Missouri.
MFH targets other specific health care issues
through its Priority Area Grant (PAG) effort. Current funding
supports programs that provide dental sealants for children
through the Smiles Across Missouri PAG, improved chronic care
management through the Better Self-Management of Diabetes
PAG, and integrated mental health and substance abuse services
through the Co-Occurring Disorders PAG. Additionally, MFH
funds critical operating expenses of small and medium-sized
health organizations through its Basic Support program.
MFH also has established itself as the leading source of non-partisan
health policy studies in Missouri, and funds a wide variety
of health care advocacy efforts. MFH also has provided emergency
support to Missouri organizations impacted by natural disasters,
including a Hurricane Katrina relief effort and assistance
following tornadoes in southeast Missouri.
In January 2007, MFH announced its largest single grant -
$11 million to provide the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine
for 30,000 girls and women this year in Missouri. The grant
represents the largest non-governmental funding of the vaccine's
distribution in the United States, and the most comprehensive
effort in any state to ensure all who can benefit from the
vaccine receive it.
By area of the state, MFH's funding has been distributed as
follows:
Bootheel (10 southeast counties): 79 grants, totaling
$14 million
Central (11 central counties): 134 grants, totaling
$39 million
Lake Ozark (9 mid-Missouri counties): 27 grants, totaling
$6.2 million
Lower East (9 lower eastern counties): 58 grants, totaling
$11.7 million
North Central (4 north central counties): 12 grants,
totaling $1.5 million
Northeast (12 northeast counties): 45 grants, totaling
$9.6 million
St. Louis Metropolitan (6 counties & City of St.
Louis): 538 grants, totaling $99.8 million
South Central (7 south central counties): 19 grants,
totaling $4 million
Southwest (8 far southwest counties): 36 grants, totaling
$7.2 million
Springfield (8 mid-southwest counties): 68 grants,
totaling $12.7 million
For more information about MFH, its funding
strategies and its health policy efforts and publications,
visit the website at www.mffh.org.
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