From Nonprofit Quarterly <[email protected]>
Subject Reclaiming the Future of Healthcare
Date August 8, 2022 5:04 PM
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From transforming our broken system through community development to overhauling the world of social services

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** Health Justice
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This month’s Health Justice newsletter is all about the future of healthcare—from transforming our broken system through community development to overhauling the world of social services for both practitioners and patients. We open with the next installment of our health justice series on bodily autonomy, where Sonia Sarkar argues that community members with lived experiences of health inequities must have a say in what healthcare looks like at all levels. Next, we examine why the social service industry fails its workers and how we can alleviate these demanding professions through a holistic, healing-based approach. We then look at why embracing technology and collaboration could transform the social service industry to create healthier, more equitable communities. Finally, the NPQ team is expanding: we’re hiring a senior editor for our Racial Justice desk!

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Building Community Power to Reclaim Health ([link removed])
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The fight to ensure that community members have a say in what healthcare looks like at the individual, community, and societal levels has never been more urgent. Read more… ([link removed])


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The Promise of Parallel Process: A Paradigm of Healing for Human Services ([link removed])
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The social service industry is in crisis. Parallel Process can help both heal the despair of working within these demanding professions and promote a health justice mission. Read more… ([link removed])

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A Better Way to Do Good: The Case for Comprehensive Community Care ([link removed])
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We need a wholesale shift in how we deliver social services—one that embraces technology and collaboration to create healthier, more equitable communities. Read more… ([link removed])


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NPQ Job Posting: Senior Editor, Racial Justice ([link removed])
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The NPQ team is expanding: we’re hiring a senior editor for our Racial Justice desk! Read more… ([link removed])

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