FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Andrea Daitz, RWJF, (609) 627-5937, adaitz@rwjf.org
Carmon Cunningham, JFF, (617) 728-4446, ccunningham@jff.org
Mark Popovich, THF, (202) 828-1643, mpopovich@hitachifoundation.org
NEW INITIATIVE LAUNCHED TO IMPROVE QUALITY BY SUPPORTING WORKERS ON THE FRONT LINES OF HEALTH AND HEALTH CARE
Jobs to Careers Proposals Accepted Through May 18, 2006
Princeton, NJ, March 23, 2006 – A new national initiative, Jobs to Careers: Promoting Work-Based Learning for Quality Care,
was launched today to support the needs of workers delivering direct
health care and services (people such as medical assistants, health
educators, laboratory technicians, substance abuse counselors and home
health aides), their employers, and the people they serve. Jobs to
Careers, a program established by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
(RWJF), in collaboration with The Hitachi Foundation, will support
partnerships of employers and educational institutions to advance and
reward the skill and career development of incumbent frontline workers.
Frontline workers practice in settings such as acute care hospitals,
long-term care institutions, behavioral and community health clinics,
and public and community health organizations. They provide their
patients and clients with preventive and early intervention services,
chronic illness management strategies, and long-term and
post-hospitalization rehabilitative care. These workers—4.7 million of
them in the United States—earn less than $40,000 per year on average.
“Ensuring a stable, well-trained frontline workforce is essential to
the quality of our nation’s public health and health care systems,”
said Victor Capoccia, Ph.D., senior program officer at RWJF. “But
workers on the front lines—the people with the most direct contact with
patients and clients—often receive limited formal training and low
wages. We need to think differently and build systems to develop
skills, build careers, recognize and reward these workers, especially
as we face new public health challenges and an aging population.”
The Jobs to Careers call for proposals
released today encourages new or existing partnerships of employers,
educational institutions and other community organizations to apply for
grants through this four-year, $15.3 million initiative. Projects
supported through Jobs to Careers will expand and redesign systems to
create lasting improvements in the way that institutions train and
advance their frontline workers. Projects will also test new models of
education and training that incorporate work-based learning, an
approach to adult learning that formalizes and rewards learning that
occurs within one’s job.
“People on the front lines of health care help save lives. We need to
do a better job of ensuring they have skills and career paths. That is
key to improving quality of care and building new opportunities for a
group too often overlooked,” said Barbara Dyer, president and CEO of
The Hitachi Foundation. “This new initiative is an important step
forward. It is exciting for us to collaborate with the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, and we much anticipate learning from the
on-the-ground projects these combined resources will make possible."
“The initiative seeks to implement, learn from, advance, and build on
proven approaches to improving the capacity of frontline workers to
deliver high-quality care and to succeed and advance in the health care
industry,” according to Jerry Rubin, vice president at Jobs for the
Future and national program director for Jobs to Careers.
More information about the Jobs to Careers initiative, including the call for proposals, is available at www.jtcp.org.
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About the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
www.rwjf.org
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the pressing health and
health care issues facing our country. As the nation's largest
philanthropy devoted exclusively to improving the health and health
care of all Americans, the Foundation works with a diverse group of
organizations and individuals to identify solutions and achieve
comprehensive, meaningful and timely change. For more than 30 years the
Foundation has brought experience, commitment, and a rigorous, balanced
approach to the problems that affect the health and health care of
those it serves. When it comes to helping Americans lead healthier
lives and get the care they need, the Foundation expects to make a
difference in your lifetime.
About the Hitachi Foundation
www.hitachifoundation.org
The Hitachi Foundation is a nonprofit, independent, philanthropic
organization established to enhance the well-being of economically
isolated people in the United States. The Foundation systematically
invests in path breaking practices for use by business and nonprofit
organizations to mutually address community problems. These practices
alleviate conditions that perpetuate poverty and also help to
strengthen business.
About Jobs for the Future
www.jff.org
Jobs for the Future is a Boston-based nonprofit that seeks to
accelerate the educational and economic advancement of youth and adults
struggling in today’s economy. JFF partners with leaders in education,
business, government, and communities around the nation to: strengthen
opportunities for youth to succeed in postsecondary learning and
high-skill careers; increase opportunities for low-income individuals
to move into family-supporting careers; and meet the growing economic
demand for knowledgeable and skilled workers. JFF serves as the
national program office for Jobs to Careers: Promoting Work-Based
Learning for Quality Care.
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