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
With Federal Rule Issued, States Advance Prescription Drug Importation Programs
/in Prescription Drug Pricing Colorado, Florida, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont Blogs, Featured News Home Model Legislation, Newly-Enacted Laws, Prescription Drug Pricing, State Rx Legislative Action /by Jennifer Reck and Trish RileyEarlier this month, the Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary published the final rule for state importation of prescription drugs from Canada. To receive federal approval for their Section 804 importation programs (SIPs), the six states with laws enabling importation (VT, FL, ME, CO, NM, and NH) must meet the rule’s safety and cost-savings requirements […]
Harm Reduction in the COVID-19 Era: States Respond with Innovations
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Behavioral/Mental Health and SUD, Chronic and Complex Populations, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, COVID-19, Health Equity, Population Health /by Mia Antezzo, Eliza Mette and Jodi ManzDespite COVID-19 workarounds, such as telehealth and virtual recovery programs enabled by flexible federal guidelines, more than 40 states have reported increases in drug overdoses during the pandemic, underscoring the importance of keeping state harm reduction programs as accessible as possible. As COVID-19 upends the nation’s health care systems, treatment for substance use disorder (SUD) […]
CMS Approves Georgia’s Partial Medicaid Expansion
/in Policy Georgia Blogs, Featured News Home Eligibility and Enrollment, Health Coverage and Access, Medicaid Expansion, Work Requirements /by Anita CardwellLast week, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approved Georgia’s Pathways to Coverage Section 1115 waiver request, allowing for a limited expansion of Medicaid that provides coverage to individuals ages 19 to 64 earning up to 100 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL).
NASHP Releases National Care Coordination Standards for Children and Youth with Special Health Care Needs
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home Care Coordination, Children/Youth with Special Health Care Needs, Children/Youth with Special Health Care Needs, Chronic and Complex Populations, Healthy Child Development, Integrated Care for Children, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health /by NASHP StaffThe National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) has released a new set of standards to help states provide high-quality care coordination for children and youth with special health care needs (CYSHCN). Care coordination is an important strategy to improve the quality of health care and reduce costs, and state officials are increasingly using it […]
How Oregon Uses Medicaid Incentive Payments and Quality Measures to Improve Contraceptive Use and Timely Postpartum Care
/in Policy Oregon Blogs, Featured News Home Health Equity, Integrated for Pregnant/Parenting Women, Maternal Health and Mortality, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Medicaid Managed Care, Population Health, Quality and Measurement /by Eddy FernandezTo improve effective contraceptive use and timely postpartum care statewide, Oregon’s Medicaid program successfully used incentive payments and quality measures to increase the rates of effective contraceptive use from 35.4 to 46.8 percent between 2015 and 2018, and timely postpartum care from 61.3 to 68.2 percent between 2018 to 2019. Oregon implemented the quality incentive […]
State Strategies to Address the Black Maternal Health Crisis
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home Eligibility and Enrollment, Eligibility and Enrollment, Essential Health Benefits, Health Coverage and Access, Infant Mortality, Integrated for Pregnant/Parenting Women, Maternal Health and Mortality, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Medicaid Managed Care /by Taylor Platt, Eddy Fernandez and Carrie HanlonThe inequities laid bare by COVID-19 underscore the importance of states’ efforts to develop policies and interventions to address all health disparities. Systemic racism, a driver of these inequities, also fuels disparities in maternal morbidity and mortality – Black women are four-times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than White women. States are on […]
States Work to Advance Racial Equity in COVID-19 Outcomes and Beyond
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Community Benefit, COVID-19, Health Equity, Housing and Health, Population Health, Quality and Measurement, Social Determinants of Health /by Elinor HigginsDisparities in states’ COVID-19’s health outcomes have driven home the need for policymakers to reassess their work to advance racial equity and redirect efforts to be more effective. A recent update to the National Academy for State Health Policy’s (NASHP) interactive map, How States Collect Data, Report, and Act on COVID-19 Racial and Ethnic Disparities, reveals […]
NASHP Slide Deck Helps Policymakers Understand the Health Care Cost Conundrum
/in Health System Costs Blogs, Featured News Home Consumer Affordability, Health System Costs, Hospital/Health System Oversight, Making the Case for Action, Total Cost of Care Benchmark /by Johanna ButlerCOVID-19 and its impact on states’ economies and budgets has refocused attention on high health care costs. To help state policymakers engage in the difficult discussions around how best to lower the health care cost trajectory, the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP) created the slide deck Understanding the Health Care Cost Conundrum in […]
States Race to Create COVID-19 Vaccination Distribution Plans
/in COVID-19 State Action Center Blogs, Featured News Home Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Consumer Affordability, COVID-19, Health Equity, Health System Costs, Population Health, Social Determinants of Health /by Rebecca Cooper, Ariella Levisohn, Jill Rosenthal and Trish RileyAs development of a COVID-19 vaccine continues, states are racing to develop vaccine distribution plans and are eager to ensure that the administrative challenges of testing and personal protective equipment distribution are not repeated. They must orchestrate vaccine storage and administration, data tracking, and capacity issues while questions about who will ultimately pay for the […]
Results of a Five-State Community of Practice to Improve Medicaid Immunization Rates through Partnerships
/in Policy Blogs, Featured News Home CHIP, CHIP, Chronic Disease Prevention and Management, Health Coverage and Access, Health Equity, Immunization, Integrated for Pregnant/Parenting Women, Maternal Health and Mortality, Maternal, Child, and Adolescent Health, Medicaid Managed Care, Population Health /by Rebecca Cooper, Jill Rosenthal and Ariella LevisohnFaced with persistent disparities in vaccination rates among children and pregnant women, a five-state community of practice, coordinated by the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP), AcademyHealth and Immunize Colorado, formed interdisciplinary, cross-agency teams to address access and other challenges to reduce immunization gaps among low-income pregnant women and children. Their approaches and lessons […]