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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.

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


LGBTQIA+ Pride Month: A Journey of Acceptance and Joy
6/5/2024 • Posted by Tiffany Majtyka, RN, Case Manager/Care Specialist II in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Pride Month 2024
 

June is LGBTQIA+ Pride Month. It is a time to recognize and celebrate the LGBTQIA+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual, and more) communities, raise awareness about LGBTQIA+ rights and issues, and promote inclusivity and acceptance.

During this monthlong observance, we will spotlight LGBTQIA+ voices from across Fidelis Care and community-based organizations. Tiffany Majtyka, RN, Case Manager/Care Specialist II, shared the following:

I turned 48 this year, and for most of my life, I hid parts of myself from the world. Being a young adult in the early 1990s ­ before the rise of the internet ­ I didn’t have the resources to understand what it was to be gay. Mainstream magazines did not really cover gay relationships. Living in my small town in Michigan, I felt lost, different, alone. I had dreams of being a mom and wondered if that would happen. In 1994, reproductive medicine was not what is today. With no internet and no books to understand my feelings, I decided to suppress the feelings I was having. I headed on a path of living a heterosexual life, even though it never felt right. It was like I was living someone else’s life. I look back at that time in my life with regrets for not being my authentic self. But the silver lining from that time are my two children, who became my world.

Researching being gay in 2024 looks a lot different. Between social media, Google, and the news, there is so much more information. Three years ago, I stopped suppressing the feeling I was having and started to work on myself. I specifically started working with someone on my goals in life. I started my path to live my life as my authentic self. I started to attend queer events. I started to make friends with other women that were just like me. I started to feel like I was living my own life. I started to travel with my friends and saw the world in differently. I felt free. I came out to my kids, my family, and my coworkers at Fidelis Care. I was received with so much love and acceptance. My parents at first wondered if they did something that didn’t allow me to be me all those years ago. My kids told me that they were proud of me and loved me. I can remember thinking, “Wow, there are no more secrets, I am finally ME!! I am finally free.” Healing myself, obtaining my goals, living my life authentically, but I still was missing one thing. A relationship. I am proud to say in 2023, I married my wife and I now have four children. It’s a life that – back in 1994 – I would have never thought I could obtain.

Last week, I attended the Buffalo Pride festival. It was amazing to be me, to be seen. I think the moment that meant the most to me is the parade started with the kids from local schools. All marching with banners of what schools they represent. To see these young people able to be celebrated and seen and loved for exactly who they are. I wonder what my life would have looked like 30 years ago if I was growing up now. I also know the work is not done. There are still many issues at hand. I am proud to work for a company that has accepted me and celebrates me. A company that is working to bridge the gap in care for everyone. I genuinely believe the world can be changed by leading with kindness, and that’s how I plan to live out my life.

Celebrating pride means to stand in the light and take pride in celebrating love. Happy LGBTQIA+ Pride Month!