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Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation Announces Senior Management Appointment
The Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation has appointed Celeste Reid Lee to the position of Senior Director of Grantmaking. She will oversee all of the Foundation’s grants programs, including a new category of funding that supports innovative approaches to making health care more affordable. In 2011, the Foundation awarded grants totaling nearly $3.3 million to 72 community organizations across Massachusetts.

High Stakes for Companies and Workers as Massachusetts Seeks to Tame Health Care Costs
A study by a leading health care economist concludes that if health care costs in Massachusetts grow more slowly than projected, workers could pocket as much as an extra $9,200 in take-home pay between 2011 and 2019. Over the same period, Massachusetts employers could save up to $34.5 billion in premium payments and preserve an additional $4.1 billion to invest in jobs and profits — all of which would otherwise be lost to rising health care costs.

Sick Massachusetts Residents Say Health Care Costs Are a Worsening Problem

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation selects 2012-2013 Massachusetts Institute for Community Health Leadership class
Eighteen emerging leaders in health care access have been named to the seventh class of the Massachusetts Institute for Community Health Leadership (MICHL). MICHL is a leadership development program designed to help high potential professionals to increase their personal impact and enhance their health organization’s influence in the community and the health care system. The 18-day educational program takes place over the course of nine months, offering a highly experiential curriculum that includes classroom work, peer-to-peer exchanges and collaborative learning. During the program, students develop and implement a project that addresses a health care issue impacting low-income and vulnerable people in Massachusetts.
MICHL engages participants in:
- Exploring the leadership challenges facing health care organizations in Massachusetts;
- Identifying and building the capacities and competencies leaders will need to meet the challenges; and
- Fostering collaboration among private nonprofits, public agencies and academic institutions.
Past graduates include Lynn Bethel, Director, Office of Oral Health, Massachusetts Department of Public Health; Laura Sullivan, MD, Medical Director, Cambridge Health Alliance; Derek S. Brindisi, Director of Public Health for the City of Worcester Department of Health and Human Services; and Dr. Gary Chu, VP of Community Collaboration at New England Eye.
The 2012-2013 class includes:
- Rebecca Balder, Health Safety Net Director, Division of Health Care Finance & Policy
- Melinda Burri, Director of Operations, Windsor Street Health Center
- Paulette Renault-Caragianes, Director, City of Somerville Health Department
- Marta Chadwick, Director, Violence Intervention & Prevention Program, Brigham & Women’s Hospital
- Kevin Coughlin, Executive Director, Greater Lowell Health Alliance
- Holle Garvey, Nurse Practitioner, Sisters of Providence Health System
- Katherine Howitt, Senior Policy Analyst, Community Catalyst
- Jacqueline M. Johnson, Chief Operations Officer, Caring Health Center
- Stacey King, Director, Community Health & Wellness Program, Cambridge Public Health Department
- Joanna Kreil, Quality Initiatives Manager, Mass. League of Community Health Centers
- Nancy Mahan, Senior Vice President, Program Services, Bay Cove Human Services, Inc.
- Matthew McCall, Senior Consultant, The Home for Little Wanderers
- Anne McHugh, Director Chronic Disease Prevention & Control, Boston Public Health Commission
- Lenore Tsikitas, Health Access & Promotion Coordinator, Mass. Department of Public Health
- Rossana Valencia, Clinical Policy Analyst II, UMass Medical School
- Jennifer Valenzuela, National Director of Program, Health Leads
- Alyssa Vangeli, Policy Analyst, Health Care for All
- Cathy Wirth, Project Manager, Healthy Kids, Healthy Future
The mission of the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation is to expand access to health care. It focuses on collaborating with public and private stakeholders to develop measurable and sustainable solutions that benefit uninsured, vulnerable, and low-income individuals and families in the Commonwealth. The Foundation was formed in 2001 with an endowment from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. It operates separately from the company and is governed by its own Board of Directors.
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Health Coverage Fellowship Chooses Class for 2013
The Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation today announced that eleven medical journalists from across the nation have been selected for the 2013 class of the Health Coverage Fellowship.
The 2013 participants include Greg Bordonaro of the Hartford Business Journal, Ibby Caputo of WGBH-Radio in Boston, Elizabeth Comeau of the Boston Globe, Dan Gorenstein of American Public Media’s Marketplace, Daniela Hernandez of Wired.com in San Francisco, Dr. Suzanne Koven of the Boston Globe and Massachusetts General Hospital, Priyanka Dayal McCluskey of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, Kathleen McNerney of WBUR-Radio in Boston, Sarah Palermo of the Concord Monitor, Shannon Pettypiece of Bloomberg News, and Patty Wight of Maine Public Radio.
The fellowship is designed to help the media improve its coverage of critical health care issues. It does that by bringing in as speakers more than 50 top health officials, practitioners, researchers, and patients. It also brings the fellows out to watch first-hand how the system works, from walking the streets at night with mental health case workers to riding in a Medflight helicopter or spending a morning in a crowded emergency room.
The program, which is entering its twelfth year, is sponsored by the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation, with support from the Blue Shield of California Foundation, Connecticut Health Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Maine Health Access Foundation, New Hampshire’s Endowment for Health, and the Universal Health Care Foundation of Connecticut.
The fellowship will run for nine days, beginning April 26. It is housed at Babson College’s Center for Executive Education in Wellesley, and is operated in collaboration with leading journalism organizations. Larry Tye, who covered health and environmental issues at the Boston Globe for 15 years, directs the program. A former Nieman Fellow and author of six books, Tye has taught journalism at Boston University, Northeastern, Tufts, and Harvard.
The fellowship will focus on a series of pressing medical issues – from implementing health care reform to curbing costs, addressing mental illness, and redressing public health threats. Attention also will be given to breakthroughs in medical treatments and innovations in the delivery of care.
The teaching will not end when fellows head back to their stations or papers. Tye, the program director, will be on call for the journalists for the full year following their nine days in Wellesley. He will help when they are stuck for ideas or whom to call on a story. He will assist in thinking out projects and carving out clearer definitions of beats. He also maintains a web site where fellows will post their stories and keep in touch.
Media Inquiries
The Foundation will make every effort to respond to requests for interviews and information in advance of deadlines.
Contact:
Maia BrodyField - Administration and Strategic Initiatives Officer
Phone: 617-246-3816
Email: [email protected]
General Information: [email protected]