Our Work

The Funders Forum on Accountable Health

 The Funders Forum on Accountable Health, established in 2016, is a group of philanthropic funders committed to collaborative national (and state/local) efforts that advance multisector, health-related partnerships centered in and accountable to communities, with the aim of creating equity-focused, transformed systems that support health, well-being, and thriving communities. 

Funders Forum Strategies

The Forum undertakes this work through the following strategies rooted in the elevation of community voice and power shifting, and adoption of approaches that foster inclusion, equity, and impact: 

  • Advancing federal (and state/local) policy and practice in support of multi-sector, health-related partnerships
  • Aligning funders by identifying the potential for shared language/definitions, frameworks, and other strategies
  • Coordinating, linking, and networking with other national efforts that advance these partnerships 
  • Building and disseminating knowledge and practice of health-centered multi-sector partnerships among practitioners, policy makers, and philanthropy

Participating Foundations

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina Foundation, Blue Shield of California Foundation, The California Endowment, The Commonwealth Fund, Episcopal Health Foundation, Kresge Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

Community-Driven Multisector Partnerships:

Lessons from Accountable Communities for Health

Accountable Communities for Health (ACHs) are multi-sector, community-based partnerships that bring together health care, public health, social services, other local partners, and residents to address unmet health and social needs of the individuals and communities they serve.

The Forum draws upon its extensive knowledge of the ACH model to advance and promote multisector health-related efforts committed to systems change. There are currently 160+ ACH efforts across the country, and many other multisector health efforts that have adopted components of the ACH model to improve the health and wellbeing of individuals and communities.

Essential Components of the ACH Model

  • Shared Vision: Collective action to address shared community challenges.
  • Equity: Dual focus on direct health and upstream drivers of health.
  • Governance: Shared decision making amongst partners.
  • Community Voice: Meaningful community partnership in all facets of efforts.
  • Backbone: Trusted organization to align community with partners, leverage shared resources and skills, and fulfill administrative and coordination functions.
  • Data & Analytics: Collective, data-informed actions.
  • Portfolio of Interventions: Focus on alignment, coordination, and mutual reinforcement of collective efforts, rather than specific interventions.
  • Sustainability: Design to address ongoing priorities, build community capacity, and strengthen civic assets.

Examples of ACH and ACH-like Models

Contact Us  

Subscribe here to receive periodic updates from the Funders Forum about upcoming events, publications, and more, or contact us at [email protected].