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New Webinar Series Equips Community Leaders to Address Structural Racism as Root Cause of Health Inequities

By Advos

TL;DR

HCN Global's webinar series provides community leaders with tools to identify structural racism, offering a strategic advantage in advocating for health equity and systemic change.

The two-part webinar series teaches participants to analyze how housing, education, and immigration policies create health disparities and develop action plans for advocacy.

This initiative empowers communities to address structural racism, aiming to reduce health inequities and create better access to care for Latino and Black families.

HCN Global's bilingual webinar series connects daily struggles like choosing rent over groceries to systemic racism, offering practical tools for community-led change.

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New Webinar Series Equips Community Leaders to Address Structural Racism as Root Cause of Health Inequities

HCN Global is launching the ninth edition of its Culture of Health / la Cultura de Salud multimedia programming series with a new focus on structural racism as a root cause of health inequities affecting Latino and Black communities in the United States. Supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), the initiative builds on more than 40 years of HCN Global's work with communities of color at a time when these communities continue to face compounding barriers to health access, education, and economic opportunity.

Structural racism—defined as the policies, systems, and practices built into society that create and maintain racial inequities—continues to shape who has access to quality healthcare, nutritious food, safe housing, and educational opportunities. These barriers disproportionately impact Latino, Black, Indigenous, and immigrant communities, resulting in measurably worse health outcomes and reduced life expectancy. Health and economic data reveal persistent racial disparities where Black women and infants experience significantly higher mortality rates than their white counterparts, while Latino communities have faced higher uninsured rates and disproportionate impacts from COVID-19.

"Community partners are on the front lines witnessing how structural barriers show up in daily life—families choosing between rent and groceries, children attending underfunded schools, immigrants afraid to access healthcare," said Alison Rodden, HCN Global CEO. "This series gives them the language, frameworks, and practical examples of how to name these structures, connect them to health outcomes, and mobilize for change."

The Building Equity: Tools for Community Leadership Webinar Series consists of two parts. The first webinar, "Seeing the Structures," examines how inequities in housing and food systems, education and health literacy, and immigration policy impact community health and access to care. The second webinar, "From Knowledge to Action," is an interactive workshop where participants map local barriers, develop messaging that connects community issues to structural causes, and create action plans for organizing, advocacy, and systems-level change.

HCN Global's research identified gaps in how community organizations understand and communicate about structural racism as a driver of health inequities. While leaders witness these impacts firsthand, many lack shared language and frameworks to connect lived experiences to systemic causes or advocate effectively for change. This webinar series addresses those gaps by providing evidence-based, culturally relevant tools; elevating community expertise; and offering bilingual resources and peer learning opportunities.

Leveraging national networks including La Red Hispana, Melanin Thriving, and LatinEQUIS, the initiative will expand access to trusted community partners. Dedicated webpages were launched to house resources designed to help community leaders and organizers continue this work beyond the live sessions. For Spanish resources visit laredhispana.org/liderazgo-para-una-cultura-de-salud/. For English-preferring Latino and Black audiences visit melaninthriving.com/leadership-for-culture-of-health and wearelatinequis.com/leadership-for-a-culture-of-health.

Community leaders, health workers, advocates, and partner organizations interested in participating can register at https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/A4d9Hx10RdGvjIiHg4i5NQ#/registration. Webinars are free and open to all who work with communities impacted by health inequities.

Curated from Noticias Newswire

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