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We create solutions that advance health equity for all and drive cross-sector enablement of health equity, improved health outcomes and long-term enterprise value — not only because it’s the right thing to do, but also because it makes good business sense.
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Advancing health equity should start with strategy. Regardless of where an organization is along its health equity journey, an enterprise-level approach is core to defining strategic goals, prioritizing initiatives and creating alignment among leaders. The strategy, once developed, can be the foundation for how health equity priorities are then translated into programs, funding and collaborations, and how health equity principles are embedded in an organization’s people, processes, technology and key performance indicators (KPIs). Health equity strategies will also evolve over time as programs mature, the external landscape changes or the organization’s priorities shift.
Without a defined strategy, ownership and accountability, health equity runs the risk of remaining an aspirational goal vs. becoming a structured program with operational viability and resources. Encouragingly, 98% of surveyed organizations report having a health equity strategy in place and 82% report that strategy as being enterprise-driven. A noted caveat is that eligibility to participate in the survey was intentionally contingent on respondents having a role in health equity efforts, inherently increasing the likelihood of participants coming from organizations with defined strategies.
To lead this strategy, 58% of organizations have designated a chief health equity officer (CHEO), 21% have enveloped it into the responsibilities of another C-suite or comparable executive-level leader and 20% have established a health equity director. Life sciences organizations in particular skew toward designating a CHEO (79%).
Health equity is, however, a relatively new endeavor for most respondents. Roughly 60% of organizations developed their health equity strategy within the past five years — and 34% within the past three years, largely during the COVID-19 pandemic. Inversely, governments have been active in the space for much longer: 62% of state public health agencies have had a strategy in place for over five years. Regionally speaking, both newer and more enterprise-driven strategies are found in Northeast-based organizations.
When asked their top three health equity priorities, organizations indicated the greatest consensus on three key areas but otherwise ranked most priority areas similarly:
- Health care access and quality (34% of all organizations)
- Health equity strategy development (33% of organizations)
- Diversity and inclusion of employees (28% of organizations)
Chart 2. “Which of the following are your organization’s top three health equity priority focus areas?” | Survey responses for all organizations and an indication of each organization type’s top three priority focus areas.