Site Search
- resource provided by the Forum Network Knowledgebase.
Search Tip: Search with " " to find exact matches.
Windsor Public Schools Receives $334,690 Grant for Family and Community Partnership Plan
New Issue Brief Addresses Northwest Connecticut's Addiction Crisis
Nonprofit Organizations Invited To Participate in Give Local Greater Waterbury and Litchfield Hills
New Report Highlights A Better Way to Assess the Developmental Needs of Children in Early Childhood Systems
Hartford Selected to Participate in National Job Quality Initiative
Community Foundation Accepting Grant and Scholarship Applications
United Way of Western Connecticut Grant Cycle to Open February 5
CT Philanthropy Digest - February 2018
Today Is Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) Awareness Day
Valley Community Foundation Welcomes New Board Members
Solidago Foundation CEO to Speak at Briefing on Grantmaking and Civic Engagement
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Foundation Awards Over $2.3M to More Than 900 Organizations in 2017
United Way of Central and Northeastern Connecticut Raises $60,000 in Grants to Support Neighbors in Need
Foundation Grant Will Help Meet the Needs of Area Youth Struggling with Homelessness
City of Hartford and Community Partners in Action to Launch Reentry Welcome Center with $450K from Hartford Foundation
United Way of Western Connecticut Welcomes New Board Members
Households Which Earned $54,000 or Less in 2017 Can File State and Federal Taxes for FREE
People's United Community Foundation Awards More Than $1M in Grants to Connecticut Nonprofits
PERSPECTIVE: Access to Healthy Foods: How Far Are You Willing to Go?
HARTFORD, CT -- Blog post by by Garth Graham, M.D., MPH, is a leading authority on social determinants of health. President of the Aetna Foundation since 2013 and Vice President of Community Health for Aetna, Inc., Dr. Graham is a former deputy assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the Obama and Bush administrations where he also ran the Office of Minority Health.
For the first time in the history of the United States, today’s youth are expected to have a shorter life-span than their parents. With medical, scientific and technological advances, this notion seems dumbfounding. But when we step away from the science and technology and take a deeper look at our communities, you can find the root causes. Access to healthy food, public safety and environmental factors are all driving forces behind this decline in longevity. These social determinants of health are becoming increasingly influential to our health . . .