Welcome | Voices of CCPH | Partnerships | Services & Resources | Events | Community | News
Partnerships that Last
The CCPH Principles of Partnership (PoP) form an ethical framework for partnerships that guide their development and pursue the aims of social justice and health equity through community action.
The Latest News and Events
HBCU Coalition Member Spotlight: Karen Mathews, MD, MHA, FAAFP
Get to know MSI Hub HBCU Coalition Member Karen M. Mathews, MD, MHA, FAAFP. She serves as the Executive Director of Health & Psychological Services in the University Health & Wellness Center at Central State University. In April, she led an incredibly informative session about HBCU student-centered mental health services and solutions that she and her team have implemented for students at Central State University for our HBCU Coalition meeting.
HBCU Coalition Member Spotlight: Al Richmond, MSW
Community. Networking. Health Equity. CCPH Executive Director, Al Richmond, MSW, shares with us his connection to HBCUs, why he believes there’s an importance for CCPH to focus on Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), and how we can scale the work being done.
Event Recap: All of Us HBCU Road Tour at Tuskegee University
The Tuskegee University All of Us HBCU Road Tour featured a webinar that honored the lives lost and lives impacted by the legacy of the Tuskegee Study. It also spotlighted current research being conducted by the Tuskegee University, North Carolina A&T State University and Morgan State University All of Us Institutional Champion Teams.
Strengthening the Network: Sharing Best Practices, Resources, and Challenges in Improving Health on Campus
Date & Time: June 29, 2023 1:00 PM EDT Description: We have planned a 30-minute breakout session where you can actively participate,...
CEACR Speaker Series – Disaggregating AANHPI Data to Achieve Health Equity & Justice Part 2
Date & Time: May 12, 2023 1:00 PM EDT Description: Suboptimal collection and reporting of racial and ethnic data on Asian American (AA), Native...
CEACR Speaker Series – Disaggregating AANHPI Data to Achieve Health Equity & Justice Part 1
Date & Time: Mar 24, 2023 1:00 PM Description: Suboptimal collection and reporting of racial and ethnic data on Asian American (AA),...
Collaborative Projects
CCPH is proud of its broad base of partnerships across all stakeholder groups in the community at large and our work together to advance health equity and social justice.
Click on the squares in the “Collaborative Projects” section below to explore our current partnership projects.
COVID
WEBINARS
Explore our Current Partnerships
Health equity and social justice cannot be achieved by going it alone. They can only be achieved through collaborative efforts. We all need partners and lots of them in order to affect important changes.
25+ years of
Services & Resources
We serve our partnering communities through dynamic training sessions, consultations, office hours, and speaking engagements.
Learn more about how you can partner with us on our service pages.
CCPH’s goal is to share knowledge. Over time, we have developed and gathered a wealth of resources.
We believe that it has limited value unless we make it available to our partner community.
Sign up to access CCPH’s online library of resources.
The Voices of CCPH
Hear from CCPH Board Members, Team, Current and Past Partners and Stakeholders as they share about CCPH
Through the years, I always checked in with CCPH as the group that “kept it real” and “got it right.”
“CCPH has influenced my doctoral work by providing me with a standard to implement when conducting my own research to ensure it is strengths-based while bringing attention to health trends among populations that have been historically disregarded and excluded.”
“CCPH’s core values around equitable community engagement are in direct alignment with my approach to community-engaged research, so I knew the opportunity was just right!”
Events
Our Community
Community is dynamic and inclusive. There is no one definition of community. Community need not be defined solely by geography. It can refer to a group that self-identifies by age, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, disability, illness, or health condition. It can refer to a common interest or cause, a sense of identification or shared emotional connection, shared values or norms, mutual influence, or commitment to meeting a shared need.
Defining community in a community-campus partnership is more about the process of asking and answering key questions than about a strict definition of who is community or represents community: Are those most affected by the issue being addressed at the table? Are those who have a stake in the issue being addressed at the table? Are community members at the table? Do they play decision-making roles?
The purpose of the partnership drives the definition,
therefore each effort must ask for the definition of community.
CCPH Non-Discrimination Notice
CCPH not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, religion, or sex (including pregnancy, sexual orientation, and gender identity) in any of its programs or activities.
0 Comments