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Health Equity

At Fidelis Care, we believe everyone should have the opportunity to live a healthy life. It’s our mission to ensure New Yorkers have access to high-quality healthcare, so they can get the care they need when they need it.

But many other factors contribute to an individual’s health and wellness beyond access to healthcare. Socioeconomic conditions can influence health risks and outcomes. Poverty, food insecurity, housing instability, education, employment, access to transportation and other circumstances contribute to health disparities among underserved and vulnerable populations.

Fidelis Care is committed to removing those barriers to health to improve access, quality, and affordability. It is an ongoing process that requires working together with our members, providers, and community-based organizations to support fair and just opportunities to equal access to healthcare.

Learn more about our different approaches to improve health equity:


Key partnerships

Wellness commitment to Buffalo Urban League

To nurture social entrepreneurship, facilitate wellness, and strengthen organizations focused on Black, Indigenous and People of Color in Buffalo’s East Side, Fidelis Care and the Centene Foundation donated $1.1 million to the Buffalo Urban League (BUL) to help establish its new headquarters and develop a Wellness and Entrepreneurial Center.

In addition, Fidelis Care partners with BUL through community programs and at events held in the city focused on health, family support and stabilization services, foster care, adoption, education, job training, employment, scholarships, and more.

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Mental health alliance with The Jed Foundation

As part of our behavioral health efforts, Fidelis Care and the Centene Foundation awarded $1.1 million to The Jed Foundation (JED) to protect the mental health of New York State’s youth.

Through the funding, JED will expand its current services, providing at least five youth-serving community-based organizations (CBOs) with consultation or strategic planning services, including expert guidance, educational workshops, and training programs, equipping young people with life skills and connecting them to mental healthcare when they are in distress.

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More Health Equity News


What is Pink Eye and How you can Help your Child
6/1/2022 • Posted by Steve Materetsky, Pediatrician and Medical Director at Fidelis Care in Children's Health, Health and Wellness, In The Community

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The Three Main Cause of Pink Eye

Saying someone has ‘pink eye’ is less of a diagnosis and more of a symptom.  A red eye can be caused by numerous things in children.  The three main causes of a ‘pink eye’ are bacterial, viral, and allergic.  In a baby, drainage from the eye without a ‘pink eye’ is caused mostly by a blockage of the tube around the eye that allows for drainage of tears.  If your baby has drainage of the eye WITHOUT any other symptoms (feeding problems, fever, cough, etc), no need to worry as it is most likely a blockage and will resolve on its own.

 

Pink Eye in Toddlers and Children

Let’s turn our attention to the pink eye in toddlers and children.  For allergy causing ‘pink eye’, or ‘allergic conjunctivitis’, there is usually a clear discharge from the eye, if any.  This condition is more common in the fall and spring and is associated with other allergy symptoms like sneezing.  This condition is best treated by over the counter medications such as Benadryl, and allergy eye drops.  Keeping the windows closed and showering at the end of each day during the allergy seasons would help your child as well.

 

Pink Eye and Eye Drops

When it comes to ‘pink eye’ caused by a virus (‘viral conjunctivitis’) or a bacteria (‘bacterial conjunctivitis’), other factors come into play.  The treatment for ‘pink eye’ with one of these causes is quite similar.  It has been shown that the use of eye drops in children with this condition can make some difference if started in the first few days.  If a parent just uses warm or cool compresses, TIME will also rid the child of this condition.  Eye drops are mostly used to allow children back to school.  Most school systems prefer a child to be on eye drops for 24 hours before returning to school, though there is no medical data supporting such a stance. 

 

Self-Limiting Condition

If nothing is used, this condition is self-limiting and will resolve in 2 weeks.  Making sure a child washes hands and prevents spread by direct contact with secretions or contact with contaminated objects is imperative.  Infected individuals should not share handkerchiefs, tissues, towels, cosmetics, linens, or eating utensils.

If you think your child has a ‘pink eye’, call your doctor in order to decide the best form of treatment.  As usual, the best preventer of this condition is good and thorough handwashing.