News

From food and employment, to housing, safety, and care for families and children, Trenton organizations are working hard to fill the gaps that exist, collaborating with each other to identify missing ...
Healthcare spending in the United States would decline by $797 billion over the next decade under the congressional spending bill passed by the House of Representatives.
Healthcare providers would lose more than $770 billion in revenue over the next decade under the congressional spending bill passed by the House of Representatives.
Thousands of people in each state that expanded Medicaid could lose health coverage next year under a federal Medicaid work requirement.
Earlier this year, we reaffirmed our commitment to dismantling the biggest barrier to health in America: structural racism. In support of this mission, we’ve been working across the Foundation to ...
More than 5 million adults could lose Medicaid coverage in 2026 if Congress enacts a work requirement in states that expanded their Medicaid programs.
Although 41 states have expanded eligibility for Medicaid coverage as part of the Affordable Care Act, a study shows that coverage could be in jeopardy for millions of people if federal funding to ...
RWJF is committed to promoting and protecting inclusive policymaking and ballot measure access, two democratic tools that are critical to achieving a world where health is no longer a privilege, but a ...
RWJF announced the 10 communities chosen as finalists for the 2024 RWJF Culture of Health Prize. The Prize honors the work of communities at the forefront of addressing structural racism and other ...
RWJF expanded our commitment to impact investing with an allocation of $325 million to advance health equity in communities that have faced a historic lack of investment.
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits did not cover the cost of a modestly priced meal in 98% of U.S. counties last year. In the last quarter of 2023, a 53-cent gap remained ...
The Health Insurance Marketplace and Medicaid are important sources of coverage in farm states, with between one-fifth and one-third of the states’ populations enrolled in these two programs.