2025 Impact | Building Community-Centered Public Health
This year, BRIDGE continued our longstanding work to advance health and well-being in communities, especially those made vulnerable by systemic inequities and oppression—focusing on culturally specific, trauma-informed care and programming.
Our CHIP grant and related funding enabled us to bring on two medical doctors and educators to the BRIDGE staff, who led educational campaigns on issues that have been identified by local leaders and community members as top priority. We also continue to integrate health education and resource access information into all our existing programming, ensuring greater reach and synergy across our constituents, volunteers, staff and partners.
Our work remains community-led, community-driven and community-measured, keeping locally-identified needs and solutions at the heart of our public health approach.
Our CHIP grant and related funding enabled us to bring on two medical doctors and educators to the BRIDGE staff, who led educational campaigns on issues that have been identified by local leaders and community members as top priority. We also continue to integrate health education and resource access information into all our existing programming, ensuring greater reach and synergy across our constituents, volunteers, staff and partners.
Our work remains community-led, community-driven and community-measured, keeping locally-identified needs and solutions at the heart of our public health approach.