Member
Providers
Shop For a Plan

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.

Buffalo-Urban-League

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.

Fidelis-JED-Social


More Health Equity News


Black History Month: New York Urban League Partners with Fidelis Care
2/22/2024 • Posted by Arva Rice, President & CEO, New York Urban League in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, In The Community

Disparities in health care among African Americans include health care coverage, employment in the sector, and health conditions. African Americans are more likely to suffer from chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, or asthma and have a shorter life expectancy than their white counterparts. My organization has been a proud partner with Fidelis Care in addressing these and other disparities in the health care industry.

The New York Urban League (NYUL) has partnered with Fidelis Care to introduce high schoolers to careers in the health care space by exposing young people to various industry-related opportunities during our Young Men’s and Young Women’s Empowerment Days. Students from high schools throughout New York City spent the day at Fidelis Care offices, learning about the world of health care, engaging in thought-provoking conversations, and seeing what a future in health care could be like for them. Fidelis Care volunteers have also traveled to our schools in the Bronx to provide support during COVID-19 and ongoing mentorship of students. Fidelis Care has been a key partner in our Diversity & Inclusion Lab, and in 2023, NYUL was pleased to bestow our highest honor, the Frederick Douglass medallion, to Fidelis Care’s own President and CEO, Tom Halloran.

Black History Month is about highlighting all the contributions that Black people have made and continue to make. It is also an opportunity to shine a light on the work that still must be done. With the recent United States Supreme Court decision on college admissions, attacks on voting rights, and the loss of so many to COVID, it is important now more than ever that African Americans focus on physical as well as mental health.

This February, the New York Urban League celebrates Black History Month with events and activities designed to educate and elevate Black New Yorkers. This month's activities allow individuals to be more actively engaged in their community. Look out for NYUL Day, where we encourage all our corporate partners to show their support for NYUL by posting a photo of themselves in NYUL gear on social media with the hashtag #NYULDay24. For more information on NYUL’s Black History Month programming and to order gear, visit www.nyul.org.


Arva Rice currently serves as President & CEO of the New York Urban League, which leads the way in how underserved African Americans are educated, employed, and empowered across the five New York City boroughs. Arva is also the Interim Chair of the Civilian Complaint Review Board, which provides oversight of the NYPD on police misconduct. She is a proud member of the Women’s Forum, Greater New York Chapter of The Links Incorporated, and a Trustee at First Corinthians Baptist Church.