H4953009
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Healthy Start Initiative-Eliminating Racial/Ethnic Disparities - Address: 564 Niagara Street, Building 2, Buffalo, New York Project Director: Kimberly Blacks-Pickett, RN Phone: 718-973-9200 Website Address: CINQ.CARE
Grant program funds requested for 5 years: $5,500,000 CINQCARE, in partnership with 12 maternal and infant health and community-based stakeholders, submits this fiscal year 2024 Healthy Start Initiative: Eliminating Disparities in Perinatal Health (HS) grant proposal, entitled “Healthy Starts for Buffalo”, to the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA).
The purpose of this HS project is to measurably improve mother and baby health outcomes before, during, and after pregnancy and reduce racial/ethnic differences in these outcomes among Black residents who live in Erie County, New York.
CINQCARE anticipates three areas of achievement by the end of the five-year project period: 1. Improvement, from baseline, across the 10 HS benchmark goals 2. Achievement of at least five community consortium action plan goals, and their related performance measures 3. Reduction, from baseline, in disparities between Black moms and babies and all moms and babies in the project area across the following established measures: low-birth weight, preterm births, and infant mortality.
The proposed HS project will operate in the Erie County project area. The HS project will target the population with the highest IMR in the project area: Black residents. CINQCARE identifies three systemic drivers behind IMR, adverse perinatal outcomes, and disparities experienced by Black moms, babies, and families in the project area.
These drivers are: (1) persistent racial segregation in Western New York; (2) household poverty that correlates with racial segregation; and (3) financial disincentives for the care system – and particularly OBS – to deliver high quality care with Medicaid beneficiaries.
CINQCARE understands that late initiation of prenatal care, low birthweights, and higher rates of infant and maternal mortality among Black moms and babies in the project area ultimately result from these three inequities.
CINQCARE has spoken with Buffalo OBS, doulas, government health officials, community-based organization leaders, Medicaid managed care organizations, and hospital providers who believe better coordination of perinatal care for Black moms and babies is overdue.
The explicit commitment of each of these stakeholders to the project, combined with CINQCARE’s novel strategies for this HS project should meaningfully reduce adverse perinatal health outcomes and disparities in Greater Buffalo.
CINQCARE will deliver HS required activities, including (1) direct and enabling services for HS participants and (2) community consortium convening. CINQCARE’s HS approach is informed by Erie County’s perinatal health disparities and outcomes as well as the maternal and infant service gaps, particularly for low-income Black pregnant and postpartum women and children.
CINQCARE’s HS approach is culturally relevant and equity-centered, evidence-based, team-driven, collaborative, strengths and family-focused, and community-based.
Grant program funds requested for 5 years: $5,500,000 CINQCARE, in partnership with 12 maternal and infant health and community-based stakeholders, submits this fiscal year 2024 Healthy Start Initiative: Eliminating Disparities in Perinatal Health (HS) grant proposal, entitled “Healthy Starts for Buffalo”, to the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA).
The purpose of this HS project is to measurably improve mother and baby health outcomes before, during, and after pregnancy and reduce racial/ethnic differences in these outcomes among Black residents who live in Erie County, New York.
CINQCARE anticipates three areas of achievement by the end of the five-year project period: 1. Improvement, from baseline, across the 10 HS benchmark goals 2. Achievement of at least five community consortium action plan goals, and their related performance measures 3. Reduction, from baseline, in disparities between Black moms and babies and all moms and babies in the project area across the following established measures: low-birth weight, preterm births, and infant mortality.
The proposed HS project will operate in the Erie County project area. The HS project will target the population with the highest IMR in the project area: Black residents. CINQCARE identifies three systemic drivers behind IMR, adverse perinatal outcomes, and disparities experienced by Black moms, babies, and families in the project area.
These drivers are: (1) persistent racial segregation in Western New York; (2) household poverty that correlates with racial segregation; and (3) financial disincentives for the care system – and particularly OBS – to deliver high quality care with Medicaid beneficiaries.
CINQCARE understands that late initiation of prenatal care, low birthweights, and higher rates of infant and maternal mortality among Black moms and babies in the project area ultimately result from these three inequities.
CINQCARE has spoken with Buffalo OBS, doulas, government health officials, community-based organization leaders, Medicaid managed care organizations, and hospital providers who believe better coordination of perinatal care for Black moms and babies is overdue.
The explicit commitment of each of these stakeholders to the project, combined with CINQCARE’s novel strategies for this HS project should meaningfully reduce adverse perinatal health outcomes and disparities in Greater Buffalo.
CINQCARE will deliver HS required activities, including (1) direct and enabling services for HS participants and (2) community consortium convening. CINQCARE’s HS approach is informed by Erie County’s perinatal health disparities and outcomes as well as the maternal and infant service gaps, particularly for low-income Black pregnant and postpartum women and children.
CINQCARE’s HS approach is culturally relevant and equity-centered, evidence-based, team-driven, collaborative, strengths and family-focused, and community-based.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Buffalo,
New York
United States
Geographic Scope
City-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 218% from $1,008,333 to $3,208,333.
Cinq Care was awarded
Healthy Starts for Buffalo: Eliminating Disparities
Project Grant H4953009
worth $3,208,333
from Maternal and Child Health Bureau in May 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Buffalo New York United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years 10 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.926 Healthy Start Initiative.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Healthy Start Initiative: Eliminating Disparities in Perinatal Health.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 6/5/26
Period of Performance
5/1/24
Start Date
3/31/29
End Date
Funding Split
$3.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.2M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to H4953009
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
H4953009
SAI Number
H4953009-4237564684
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Other
Awarding Office
75RJ00 HRSA Office of Federal Assistance Management
Funding Office
75RM00 HRSA MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH BUREAU
Awardee UEI
TZ9ABVF9QNR8
Awardee CAGE
9RG06
Performance District
NY-26
Senators
Kirsten Gillibrand
Charles Schumer
Charles Schumer
Modified: 6/5/26