Aletha Maybank, MD, MPH recently joined the AMA in April 2019 as their inaugural Chief Health Equity Officer and Vice President. Her role is to embed health equity in all the work of the AMA and to launch a Center for Health Equity.
Prior to this in 2014, Dr. Maybank became an Associate Commissioner, and later a Deputy Commissioner, and lunched the Center for Health Equity, a new division in the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene geared toward strengthening and amplifying the Health Department’s work in ending health inequities. Under her leadership, and in a short amount of time, the health department made great strides in transforming the culture and public health practice by embedding health equity in the health department’s work. This work has been recognized and adapted by other City agencies and has captured the attention of the CDC and WHO.
She also teaches medical and public health students on topics related to health inequities, public health leadership and management, physician advocacy, and community organizing health. Currently, Dr. Maybank serves as President of the Empire State Medical Association, the NYS affiliate of the National Medical Association. In 2012, she co-founded “We Are Doc McStuffins,” a movement created by African-American female physicians who are inspired by the Disney Junior character, Doc McStuffins.
Dr. Maybank holds a BA from Johns Hopkins University, an MD from Temple University School of Medicine, and an MPH from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. She is a pediatrician and board certified in Preventive Medicine and Public Health.
Lunch Plenary:
A Commitment to Advance Health Equity
State Rx Purchasing Pool Buy-In Model Gives the Unemployed Access to Discounted Drugs
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Administrative Actions, Consumer Affordability, COVID-19, Health System Costs, Model Legislation, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Employee Health Plans, State Rx Legislative Action /by Jennifer ReckStates are experiencing a huge rise in the number of people without health insurance in the wake of mass layoffs resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and are seeking strategies to protect them from high prescription drug prices. The uninsured are sometimes the only consumers left paying the full list price for a drug, while the […]
States Implement Strategies to Safeguard Pregnant Women during the COVID-19 Pandemic
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Maternal Health and Mortality, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Workforce Capacity /by Taylor PlattAcross the nation, states are taking steps during the COVID-19 pandemic to protect pregnant women and their infants during delivery. States, whose Medicaid programs cover nearly half of all births in the United States, recognize the importance of ensuring all pregnant women have safe and healthy deliveries. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) […]
CARES Act Funds Help Consumers, but Create Health Coverage Eligibility Challenges for States
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home CHIP, COVID-19, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, State Insurance Marketplaces /by Anita Cardwell and Christina CousartThe Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) includes a Pandemic Unemployment Compensation benefit of $600 a week, which supplements traditional unemployment insurance (UI) benefits and provides an important source of additional financial support for individuals who qualify for these payments. However, as highlighted in NASHP’s April 6, 2020 blog, Federal Guidance Needed to […]
States Race to Secure Home- and Community-Based Services during COVID-19
/in The RAISE Act Family Caregiver Resource and Dissemination Center Blogs, Featured News Home Care Coordination, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Health Workers, COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Long-Term Care, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health, State Resources, The RAISE Family Caregiver Resource and Dissemination Center, Workforce Capacity /by Wendy Fox-Grage, Salom Teshale and Paige SpradlinUpdated May 7, 2020 In the past two months, 35 states* have rapidly amended their Medicaid home- and community-based services for older adults and their family caregivers to ensure access to long-term services and supports during the COVID-19 crisis. Under new federal rules, the states applied for Medicaid 1915(c) Appendix K waivers to make temporary or […]
New State Insurance Requirements in Response to COVID-19
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Charts, Featured News Home COVID-19, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Health IT/Data, State Insurance Marketplaces /by Christina CousartCOVID-19 has upended health care systems and states are revising health insurance rules to make sure consumers can maintain their health insurance coverage and access needed health care services during the pandemic. The chart below details recent state actions that: Limit consumer out-of-pocket costs for testing, treatment and out-of-network care; Facilitate access to and delivery […]
Governor Takes First Step to Ensure Accountability in How Hospitals Use Federal Relief Funds
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home COVID-19, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Relief and Recovery COVID-19 /by Deborah Fournier and Trish RileyBillions of federal dollars have begun to flow to the nation’s hospitals to help them treat COVID-19 patients and withstand revenue losses due to delayed elective surgeries and other procedures. The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act): Increases Medicare payments to hospitals for COVID-19 admissions by 20 percent; Permits the Centers for […]
States Rapidly Build their Telehealth Capacity to Deliver Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD, Chronic and Complex Populations, COVID-19, Health Coverage and Access, Workforce Capacity /by Kristina Long, Jodi Manz and Eliza MetteStates are turning to telehealth to minimize direct contact between patients, providers, and other staff during the COVID-19 pandemic. For opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment, this shift represents a significant departure from how these services have been historically delivered and requires rapid organizational changes.
States Protect Consumers’ Coverage and Improve COVID-19 Care Delivery through Insurance Reforms
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Consumer Affordability, COVID-19, Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Health System Costs, State Insurance Marketplaces /by Christina CousartAs COVID-19 diagnoses grow, states are making rapid-fire adjustments so consumers can access the care they need. One key strategy has been promoting health insurance enrollment to protect consumers from potentially exorbitant medical bills. Recognizing more protection is needed, state insurance regulators are also making sure consumers maintain their coverage, find appropriate care, and are […]
States Use Race and Ethnicity Data to Identify Disparities and Inform their COVID-19 Responses
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Accountable Health, COVID-19, Health Equity, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Carrie Hanlon and Elinor HigginsThe COVID-19 pandemic is shining a light on well-established racial disparities in health care access and quality, and in social and economic factors affecting health status and outcomes. The racial inequities exposed by case identification and death rates data give states opportunities to improve their responses and interventions. As state and local data becomes available, […]
It’s National Public Health Week and States Are Making Extraordinary Efforts to Safeguard our Health
/in COVID-19 State Action Center COVID-19, Health Equity, Population Health /by Trish RileyIt’s National Public Health Week, a week that often passes without notice. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought a profound awareness of the extraordinary commitment and bravery of frontline health care workers and all those who keep society functioning. To give thanks seems too little. To fight so they have the tools they need to work […]