
Awardees
of the first round of Live Long and Well grants pose for a photo
following a press conference at Codman Square Health Center, July 28.
The awardees, representatives from 12 community based organizations,
will receive $5 million in four different coalitions, with proposals
aimed at tackling economic mobility and other social determinants of
health, in a city effort to eliminate life expectancy gaps.

Dr. Bisloa Ojikutu at a press conference, July 28, announcing the grant awardees.

Mayor
Michelle Wu delivers remarks during a press conference announcing the
awardees of $5 million in grants organized by the city and funded by the
Atrius Health Equity Foundation.
Funded by Atrius Health Equity Foundation with goal of closing health equity gaps
Boston will soon channel $5 million into local coalitions working to tackle longstanding health disparities that have contributed to shorter life spans in parts of the city.
The investments, part of the city’s Live Long and Well agenda, are slated to go to four coalitions of three organizations each. They were announced at a press conference, held at Codman Square Health Center, July 28.
“We believe how long you live should not depend on your race, your ethnicity or your ZIP code. All Bostonians should live long, healthy lives,” said Dr. Bisola Ojikutu, the city’s public health commissioner, at the press conference.
The $5 million, the first of two bundles of money being invested by the Atrius Health Equity Foundation through the city’s agenda, is slated to go to four coalitions. Each group, made of community-based organizations and local community health centers, is set to work together on goals aimed at addressing social determinants of health — the factors beyond a hospital’s walls that contribute to a person or community’s wellbeing, like access to housing, good food or economic mobility.
A second round of grants using funds from Atrius is slated to be released in 2028.
Ojikutu said that addressing those social determinants — especially economic mobility — is central to how the Health Commission aims to use this funding.
“It’s important for us to remember that health and equity doesn’t begin or end within the walls of our health care facilities,” she said. “Health and wellness are built and sustained within our communities.”
A community health needs assessment, which was published by the
Boston Public Health Commission and the Boston Community Health
Collaborative earlier this summer, identified economic mobility as a key
factor in addressing community health.
It’s
one that Dr. Alister Martin, founder and director of Link Health, which
is a member of one of the grantee coalitions, said he sees regularly.
“Every
night, in my emergency department, what I see as the biggest driver of
sickness, of illness, is poverty,” said Martin, who works as an
emergency room physician at Mass General Hospital. “That’s because
patients who are on Medicaid or MassHealth in this state are living on
some $20,000 a year or less. These folks are making a decision between
paying for medication and food.”
The
first of the four groups, made up of the Boys and Girls Club of Boston,
Link Health and Harvard Street Neighborhood Health Center, will train
alumni from the Boys and Girls Club as patient navigators through Link
Health. Those patient navigators will work with an estimated 50,000
Dorchester residents to connect them with financial assistance benefits,
for example, through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
The
second group, comprised of the Immigrant Family Services Institute,
True Care Alliance Center and Massachusetts Association of Haitian
Parents will provide English-language instruction and career training
around jobs in health care, biotechnology, early childhood education and
hospitality. The training will include skills around language,
financial literacy, advocacy and health education, as well as career
coaching and wraparound supports.
In
the third partnership, the local nonprofit The Community Builders,
Codman Square Neighborhood Development Corporation and the
Talbot-Norfolk Triangle Neighbors United will work with eligible
Dorchester residents to provide
economic mobility services like housing and credit-building support,
financial coaching and workforce development. It will also connect them
with resources for childcare, transportation and food access.
The
last of the coalitions will be comprised of Upham’s Community Care,
Dorchester Food Co-op and Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development
Corporation and will focus on connecting residents to basic primary care
services, plus economic mobility coaches and food services through an
expansion of Upham’s Community Care outreach vans in locations in
Roxbury and Dorchester.
Collaboration,
Mayor Michelle Wu said, is key to the city’s approach and was central
to the vision of the Atrius Health Equity Foundation, the Boston Public
Health Commission and the community partners involved.
“Instead
of just giving some grants to do some work, this is about launching new
and needed coalitions, about being greater than the sum of our parts,”
Wu said.
These collaborations can bring better health supports to communities, said Jay Triveldi, CEO of Upham’s Community Care.
“This
work is about building trust, eliminating silos and creating the
conditions where our communities can truly thrive,” he said in remarks
at the press conference.
The
announcement marks the latest step in the city’s Live Long and Well
initiative, a population health agenda aimed at decreasing gaps in life
expectancy across the city, which the Public Health Commission announced
in July 2024.
When it
comes to those disparities, the headliner is the 23-year gap in life
expectancy between a census tract in Back Bay, where residents are
expected to live 92 years, and a Roxbury census tract two miles away,
where the life expectancy was found to be 69 years.
That gap was identified in the city’s 2023 Health of Boston life expectancy report.
Tracking that data can help bring results, said state Rep. Russell Holmes, who spoke at the press conference.
“Things
that get measured get done,” Holmes said. “We have to make a decision
that this has been measured, this is something that is clear: This 23
years is unacceptable.”
But
Ojikutu was quick to point out that while the 23-year statistic is the
most dramatic — and is frequently cited by officials and advocates in
conversations regarding health and health equity — it is not the only
life expectancy disparity across Boston’s neighborhoods.
She pointed to a 20-year gap between Back Bay and Dorchester and an 18-year gap between Back Bay and Mattapan.
Gaps also exist between the city’s residents
by race and gender. Ojikutu said Black residents have a life expectancy
seven years shorter than the city at large, and Black men in particular
have a life expectancy 10 years shorter than other men in the city.
“None
of these data are new, and they’re not unique to Boston,” Ojikutu said.
“This is a national tragedy, and it deserves the attention that we here
in Boston are going to put forth to close these gaps.”
Officials
said the $5 million in funding is especially important as the federal
government pulls back on support through programs like Medicaid and the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
Pointing
to things like President Donald Trump’s budget reconciliation bill, the
so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill,” passed in July that are slated to
reduce access to SNAP and Medicaid, Ojikutu said there’s “significant
threat” to communities and community health centers.
Wu said that the federal landscape makes city efforts like the Live Long and Well agenda’s funding more significant.
“As
the need grows greater, as the urgency grows greater, as the resources
can be few and far between coming from the federal level, here in
Boston, we are determined to continue pressing forward,” Wu said. “We
will hold ourselves to a high standard.”