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With new hospital, a place to finally give birth in D.C.’s poorest area

Innovators in Health Care: Kelly Sweeney McShane

The fate is finally sealed for Providence’s long-delayed ‘Healthy Village’. Now, other health providers are filling the gaps

Washington Business Journal, July 7, 2023 - Other health systems have been filling the void left by Providence’s exit in D.C.’s underserved east side.

Family Health and Birth Center Capital Campaign

Washington, DC faces a maternal child health crisis. The infant mortality rate is higher than the national average, and babies born to Black mothers are five times more likely to die in infancy than those born to white mothers. The risk of dying is higher for Black mothers than for white women. Across the city, our neighbors in under-resourced communities experience vast inequities in their health outcomes – including higher rates of disease, trauma, depression, and even death. 

Community of Hope Recognized for the 6th Time a Washington Post Top Workplace

WASHINGTON, DC, JUNE 18, 2021 – Community of Hope has been named one of The Washington Post’s 2021 Top Workplaces Award in the Washington, D.C. area. This 2021 award is the sixth time since 2014 that the organization has received this award.

Roughly Two-Thirds Of D.C.’s Health Care Workers And First Responders Are Vaccinated

A dental office manager who became extremely ill from COVID-19 at the start of the pandemic declined initial chances to get the vaccine because he worried about the side effects. He also doubted that he would get infected again. A program director at a health center whose son got COVID-19 initially said no to the vaccine because she needed time to decide whether she felt it was safe.

D.C. expands vaccine eligibility to all but seeks to control appointments to boost equity

As eligibility for the coronavirus vaccines expanded to all D.C. adults on Monday, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) made clear that the city will keep its focus on equity, despite demands from residents and businesses to open access as widely and quickly as possible.

DC nonprofit brings vaccines to patients in hardest-hit wards

WASHINGTON — The Washington D.C. nonprofit Community of Hope administered doses of hope at its vaccine pop-up clinic Saturday. The organization has been vaccinating 300 to 400 people at its centers in Ward 1 and Ward 8 each week. But, CEO Kelly Sweeney McShane said there was a high interest for shots at the Family Health and Birth Center in Ward 5. According to D.C. Health data, Ward 5 has had the second-highest number of COVID cases in the District. One nurse administering doses Saturday said staff had been asking when they would be able to start giving COVID vaccinations. Some people, like Michael Weaver, were eager to sign up as soon as they could. Weaver lives in Ward 8 and said his health care provider scheduled an appointment for him. “I'm usually around a lot of older guys and I'd hate to catch it and spread it to one of them, so I figured that as soon as I'm able to, I get the vaccine to protect myself and especially them," he said. RELATED: Leaders set up COVID mobile vaccination clinic for Black, brown communities in DC However, the CEO said others are still on the fence about getting the shot. “A lot of valid reasons for people to be hesitant so …[we're] making sure we're educating people so that they can make an informed choice and then create that access so when they're ready and as they're ready that they can get those vaccines," Sweeney McShane said. She said it has been a little harder to fill the shot schedule in Ward 8 than in Ward 5, where they held the clinic. By the end of the day Saturday, the team said they will have vaccinated 200 people with a Moderna dose. “COVID has certainly transformed how we do everything, it's transformed the lives of our patients," Sweeney McShane said. "The majority of our patients live in Wards 5, 7, and 8. And those are the wards that have been hit the hardest by COVID. In fact, I think Ward 8 has the highest number of deaths related to COVID. But they've also had the lowest rate of vaccination for the COVID vaccine. And so that's really our focus is how do we get the vaccine for patients who want it and who need it, and how it can save lives for residents of those parts of the city.”   Clara Chea said she was scared at first, but decided the benefits outweighed the risks. “So those who are out there scared, don't be scared. Take the vaccine," she said. "You know so you can’t have the COVID. So you can be here. So everything can go to normality. So everybody can be OK. So I step up, and I took mine.”  Community of Hope is offering vaccination appointments for their patients and some eligible community members, based on D.C. Health's rules.

Women in D.C. Face Obstacles at Every Step of Pregnancy and Childbirth

Melissa Esposito walked two miles in the snow to get to her third prenatal appointment. It had been so hard to get a time with the doctor, she was scared to reschedule.  Danielle Lloyd endured pregnancy in the food and maternal care desert that is Southeast D.C. She worried about the 40-minute drive from her home to the hospital.

How This DC Birth Center Is Building the ‘Answer for Black Women’

Health clinic expands to keep pace with poverty

AmeriHealth Caritas Invests $150K in Housing and Support Services in 2nd Phase of Its $250K Investment Commitment to Improve Health Outcomes

Why Are So Many Women Dying From Pregnancy in D.C.?

D.C. has a high maternal mortality rate. Lawmakers want to know why

The Washington Post, March 14, 2018 - D.C. has a high maternal mortality rate. Lawmakers want to know why.

DC non-profit ‘changed my life’ by providing quality healthcare in Ward 8

It’s not easy to remain optimistic about healthcare in D.C.’s Ward 8, which has some of the highest disparities of health outcomes in the Metropolitan area, but a non-profit is working to change that. Community of Hope is a place where residents can feel they can belong, and where they can get access to quality healthcare for the entire family.