Xavier University of Louisiana - Oschner and Xavier’s partnership has been centered around establishing a joint College of Medicine, to “create a strong physician pipeline that addresses longstanding inequities within the nation’s health care system and builds the health care workforce of the future” (Xavier University 2023). Xavier and Oschner have partnered since the early 1980s, when Oschner began offering clinical training sites for Xavier pharmacy students. Today, Ochsner and Xavier have established a master data sharing and use agreement that provides Xavier faculty with access to Oschner Health’s electronic medical record data. The program has hired four data scientists to provide data analytic services to Xavier faculty. They have also worked together to launch Oschner’s health equity data and quality improvement strategy. Advocacy emerging from this partnership has focused on the expansion of services covered by Medicaid to include tobacco cessation, as well as increasing access to evidence-based maternal health technology.
“Xavier University of Louisiana and Ochsner Health Partner to Create College of Medicine and Pursue Health, Educational Equity - Xavier University of Louisiana.” n.d. Accessed February 27, 2024. https://www.xula.edu/news/2023/01/xavier-university-of-louisiana-and-ochsner-health-partner-to-create-college-of-medicine-and-pursue-health-educational-equity.html.
Ochsner. 2023. “Ochsner Health-Community Benefit Report.” https://issuu.com/ochsnerweb/docs/communitybenefitreport_8x10.5_final.
Chevron - Oschner’s partnership with Chevron is centered around a smoking cessation and education program that was launched in 2021. In 2023, Chevron opted to continue the partnership for a third consecutive year through a $50,000 donation. The program is offered in the following parishes: Jefferson, St. Tammany, East Baton Rouge, West Baton Rouge, Ascension, St. Charles, Terrebonne, and Lafourche. In a press release for Oschner, cigarette smoking was described as “the leading cause of preventable deaths and diseases in the nation” (Oschner 2023). The release refers to America’s Health Rankings data that indicates smoking as one of the top 20 factors shaping poor health in Louisiana. This program is part of Oschner’s broader Healthy State initiative. Chevron funding also supports initiatives to encourage low-dose CT scans (to detect and diagnose lung cancer), teach high school students about the risks of smoking, and teach people to recognize and treat the stressors that lead to smoking.
Oschner. 2023. “Ochsner Health and Chevron Partner for a Third Consecutive Year to Offer Smoking Cessation and Education Program.” n.d. Online Newsroom. Accessed February 28, 2024. https://news.ochsner.org/news-releases/ochsner-health-and-chevron-partner-for-a-third-consecutive-year-to-offer-smoking-cessation-and-education-program.
LCHE often collaborates with the following organizations: Louisiana Department of Health, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Southern University Law Center, Dillard University, and Louisiana State University (LSU), as well as national, state, and community-based organizations, such as the National Collaborative on Health Equity, League of Women Voters, March of Dimes), American Association of University Women (AAUW), National Congress of Black Women, among others. Interdisciplinary collaboration is talked about as an integral component of health equity advocacy. In her Career Pathways interview, founder and director Alma Stewart-Allen has highlighted the importance of bridging gaps between policy, medicine, social science, social services, business, and law.
LCHE also often works closely with high school and university students, including but not limited to the Louisiana Youth Advisory Council (LYAC). Youth play an integral role in LCHE’s research and advocacy initiatives, through which they acquire the leadership, research and advocacy skills necessary for advancing environmental justice and health equity (see LCHE programs).
LCHE acts on behalf of Louisianans who are most impacted by structural inequities. In 2020, ProPublica published an article highlighting the disparities in Covid-related deaths between Black and white patients treated by Oschner Health, the largest nonprofit, academic health system in Louisiana. The journal’s analysis of data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the local coroner’s office, found that patients that were Black were more likely to be sent home, and therefore also more likely to die at home. Families reported that Oschner staff pressured them into accepting hospice care. In response, the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus also called for an investigation of Oschner’s practices. However, the Louisiana Health Department responded by declaring that the complaint was outside their purview. Following this development and seeking more impactful systems-change, LCHE filed a civil rights complaint against Oschner with the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Civil rights. Results of the civil rights investigation are still pending.
Nuestra Casa San Mateo County has collaborated with various organizations in the area to advance its mission. Some of these organizations include the San Mateo County Central Labor Council, the Housing Leadership Council of San Mateo County, and the San Mateo County Immigrant Rights Coalition. Nuestra Casa San Mateo County has also worked closely with local government officials and agencies to advocate for affordable housing and immigrant rights.
The OCEJ works closely with community members in the region; this includes the University of California, Irvine, and other community-based organizations and advocacy groups working on environmental issues in Orange County.
The CCV has been involved in various partnerships and collaborations with other environmental justice organizations and academic and government agencies to advocate for policies and programs that promote environmental justice and public health. Notably, the CCV works with Identifying Violations Affecting Neighborhoods (IVAN) Community Air Monitoring Network, Salton Sea Community, Outreach, Education and Engagement (COEE), Allies In Reducing Emissions (AIRE) Collaborative among others, including CASA Familiar, CCEJN, The LEAP Institute, and CFASE. Collaborative work is essential to CCV’s mission to promote community-based solutions instead of perpetuating environmental injustice and health disparities, including the fossil fuel industry and discriminatory land use policies.
The Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice (CCAEJ) collaborates with various organizations, including labor, faith-based, LGBTQIA, immigration, and prison reform/abolitionist organizations. For example, the organization has worked with groups such as Sierra Club, Earthjustice, Robert Redford Conservancy for Southern California Sustainability, and the California Environmental Justice Alliance on various campaigns and initiatives related to environmental justice.
The EHC collaborates with various organizations, including critical collaborators such as The California Environmental Justice Alliance (CEJA), The San Diego Coalition for Environmental and Social Justice, and The Labor Council for Latin American Advancement. The EHC does not typically criticize or distance itself from other organizations and instead focuses on building collaborative working partnerships to advance its mission and goals.
PODER collaborates with other community-based organizations and other parties that can advance its goals. Their list of collaborative organizations includes and is not limited to; the Environmental Justice Coalition for Water, the Bayview Hunters Point Mothers and Fathers Committee, and the San Francisco Rising Alliance.
APEN is a member organization of the California Environmental Justice Alliance coalition. They also partner with Filipino Advocates for Justice, the Chinese Progressive Association, Hmong Innovating Politics, and the AAPIs For Civic Empowerment Education Fund.
Among the CBE’s board of directors sits Caroline Farrell, the Executive Director of the Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment (CRPE)
The CBE collaborates with other local, state, and national grassroots organizations.
Additionally, the CBE has a history of working with labor unions representing workers closely tied to environmental issues, such as employees from refineries and power plants.