Tufts Medical Center Awards More Than $1.7 million in Grants to Support Community Initiatives
- Admin
- Feb 6
- 3 min read
February 4 (BOSTON) – Tufts Medicine announced today that Tufts Medical Center
has awarded more than $1.7 million over three years in grants to nine Boston-based
nonprofit organizations to address unmet needs highlighted in its 2026-2028
Community Health Needs Assessment.
This investment focuses on three priority areas to address social determinants of
health and other barriers in order to improve the health of Boston residents.
Grantees will:
Support culturally competent behavioral health, social-emotional wellness, and substance use disorder services.
Prevent and help manage chronic diseases by promoting access to healthy foods, exercise, and preventative screenings.
Provide opportunities for community residents to improve socioeconomic status through education, training, employment, and expanding career pathways.
Reduce access to care barriers that community residents experience inside
and outside the health care system and throughout the full continuum of care.
“Tufts Medical Center has had a longstanding commitment to improving the health
and wellness of the broader Boston community,” said Sherry Dong, Executive
Director, Community Benefits and Community Health Initiatives at Tufts Medical
Center. “By partnering with local organizations and meaningfully impacting the social
determinants of health, we can achieve our goal of ensuring that every person in our
community, regardless of their socioeconomic circumstances, has the ability to
achieve optimal health.”
The recipients of this year’s grant awards range in size, program scope, and the
populations they serve.
“South Boston Neighborhood House is grateful to Tufts Medical Center for this
investment in our older neighbors,” said Kathy Lafferty, Executive Director of South
Boston Neighborhood House (SBNH), a grant recipient. “This grant will support our
Healthy Aging and Wellness Collaborative, a partnership of South Boston
Association of Nonprofits - connecting South Boston Neighborhood House, Fourth
Presbyterian Church, and South Boston Neighborhood Development Corporation to
provide an expanded, coordinated network of services for older adults in South
Boston, strengthening our ability to enhance the health, social engagement, and
quality of life of older adults in our community.”
Through its Multi-Service Center, the Asian American Civic Association (AACA)
plans to use funding to support access to opportunities in its economic mobility
programs. “This recent grant strengthens our ability to provide comprehensive case
management to students in our workforce development programs, ensuring they
have the support needed to succeed as they transition into new careers,” said Mary
Chin, Chief Executive Officer of AACA.. “Through this partnership, we are expanding
pathways to stability, opportunity, and long-term career growth for the communities
we serve.”
The full list of grantees for Tufts Medical Center’s 2026-2028 grant cycle includes:
Asian American Civic Association
Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence
Boston Asian Youth Essential Service
Chinatown Business Association
Greater Boston Chinese Golden Age Center
Josiah Quincy Elementary School & Joseph Hurley K-8 School
South Boston Neighborhood House
St. Mary’s Center for Women and Children
Wang YMCA of Chinatown
For more information about Tufts Medical Center’s Community Health Needs
Assessment, and other community engagement, click here.
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About Tufts Medicine
Tufts Medicine is an innovative health system that brings together the best of
academic and community medicine to deliver exceptional, connected, and
accessible care. Tufts Medicine is comprised of Tufts Medical Center, the
principal teaching hospital of Tufts University and Tufts University School of
Medicine, Lowell General Hospital, MelroseWakefield Hospital, Lawrence
Memorial Hospital of Medford, Care at Home, and an integrated network of
2,300 physicians in Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire. We treat
the most complex conditions, keep our communities healthy and bring
research breakthroughs to life. Learn more at www.tuftsmedicine.org.


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