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Professional Sample Profile: The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
- Princeton, NJ, United States
- www.rwjf.org
- Who's Who
- + Contact Info
- 6096276000
- mail@rwjf.org
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Subjects
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Recent Grants
Recipient | Recipient City | Recipient State | Recipient Country | Primary Subject | Year | Grant Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coronavirus Disease 2019 - Multiple Recipients | Disaster relief | 2020 | $50,000,000 | |||
Community Catalyst
bronze
|
Boston | Massachusetts | United States | Health | 2020 | $12,650,000 |
Trustees of Princeton University | Princeton | New Jersey | United States | Public health | 2020 | $9,648,987 |
Lincoln Institute of Land Policy
gold
|
Cambridge | Massachusetts | United States | Population studies | 2020 | $8,014,811 |
Illinois Public Health Institute | Chicago | Illinois | United States | Open data | 2020 | $7,702,861 |
Subjects
- Addiction services
- Antidiscrimination
- Bullying
- Child development
- Child educational development
- Child welfare
- Economic development
- Environmental health
- Family services
- Foundations
- Graduate and professional education
- Health
- Health care administration and financing
- Health care financing
- Health insurance
- Higher education
- Homeless services
- Hospital care
- In-patient medical care
- Leadership development
- Medical education
- Mental and behavioral disorders
- Mental health care
- Nonprofits
- Nursing care
- Obesity
- Palliative care
- Preventive care
- Public health
- Public policy
- Senior services
- Smoking
- Voluntarism
Subjects
Addiction services, Antidiscrimination, Bullying, Child development, Child educational development, Child welfare, Economic development, Environmental health, Family services, Foundations, Graduate and professional education, Health, Health care administration and financing, Health care financing, Health insurance, Higher education, Homeless services, Hospital care, In-patient medical care, Leadership development, Medical education, Mental and behavioral disorders, Mental health care, Nonprofits, Nursing care, Obesity, Palliative care, Preventive care, Public health, Public policy, Senior services, Smoking, VoluntarismGeographic Focus
- National
- New Jersey
- California
- Indonesia
- New York
- Puerto Rico
- Canada
- District of Columbia
- Massachusetts
Geographic Focus
National, New Jersey, California, Indonesia, New York, Puerto Rico, Canada, District of Columbia, MassachusettsPopulation Groups
- Academics
- Economically disadvantaged people
- Low-income people
Population Groups
Academics, Economically disadvantaged people, Low-income peopleSupport Strategies
- Participatory grantmaking
- Program evaluations
- Program support
- Public engagement and education
- Research
- Research and evaluation
- Seed money
- Technical assistance
Support Strategies
Participatory grantmaking, Program evaluations, Program support, Public engagement and education, Research, Research and evaluation, Seed money, Technical assistanceTransaction Types
- Employee matching gifts
- Matching grants
- Program-related investments
Transaction Types
Employee matching gifts, Matching grants, Program-related investmentsOrganization Types
- Independent foundation
Organization Types
Independent foundationPurpose and Activities
The foundation's mission is to improve the health and health care of all Americans. Its efforts focus on fostering environments that promote health and on improving how health care in America is delivered and paid for, and how well it does for patients and their families.
HideBackground
Incorporated in 1936 in NJ; became a national philanthropy in 1972 - Founded by the late Robert Wood Johnson, who built the family firm, Johnson & Johnson, (which was founded by his father Robert Wood Johnson, I) into a worldwide health and medical care products company. Because of his service during World War II as a brigadier general in charge of the New York Ordnance District, people who knew him addressed him as the General. President Roosevelt appointed him as Vice Chairman of the War Production Board and Chairman of the Smaller War Plants Corporation. He endowed the foundation with a $1.2 billion bequest from his personal fortune. In 2014 the foundation announced that it will continue to work on issues it believes are key to the well-being of all Americans, but within its organization it will no longer divide its efforts into the silos of health and health care. Rather, all that it does will serve one goal: building a culture of health. The grantmaker is a signatory to Philanthropy’s Promise, an initiative of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP). By signing on, the grantmaker has committed to allocating the majority of its grantmaking dollars to marginalized communities and at least 25 percent to social justice strategies, such as advocacy, community organizing, and civic engagement.
HideProgram Areas (11)
21st Century Leadership
The foundation identifies leaders who have the potential to transform our nation’s health and providing them with the support they need to realize their promise. It is committed to investing in the development of health innovators and to develop new health-focused leadership programs that connect people across sectors as well as disciplines, capitalize on technology to promote networking and mentoring, and reach and help many more individuals .
Bridging Health and Health Care
The foundation believes that for too long being healthy has been defined as not being sick. It also believes that good health extends beyond the walls of medical offices to the places where people live, learn, work and play. As such, the foundation will continue to invest in programs that bridge health and health care, balancing treatment with prevention, community action and individual responsibility.
Cost, Quality, and Value
The foundation is committed to seeking the best possible outcomes and highest value from our national investments in health care, public health and population health. This includes reducing wasteful spending, increasing the reach and efficacy of fundamental health services, and investing in the identification and spread of strategies to improve the quality and reduce the costs of health care and other health services.
Culture of Health Prize
The prize is awarded annually to honor outstanding community efforts and partnerships that are helping people live healthier lives. Winning communities will each receive a $25,000 cash prize and have their accomplishments celebrated and shared broadly with the goal of raising awareness and inspiring locally-driven change across the country. The prize is a place-based prize that honors whole U.S. communities; submissions representing the work of a single organization or initiative will not be considered. Each applicant community will be required to designate a local U.S. governmental or tax exempt public charity operating in its community to accept the $25,000 prize on the community’s behalf, should they win. Community partners can decide together how to use the funds to benefit the community; reports to RWJF or UWPHI on prize expenditures are not required. See foundation web site eligibility and selection criteria and online application process.
Equal Opportunity
The foundation works with other foundations, organizations, and businesses that have long worked to increase opportunities in education, housing, and community development to make the fruits of good health available to all. In 2013, it established Forward Promise, a $9.5 million initiative focused on promoting opportunities for the health and success of middle school and high school-aged boys and young men of color.The foundation will continue to delve more deeply into the causes of the unacceptable gaps in opportunity for good health and identify additional areas that we believe call for immediate attention.
Health Care Coverage For All
For decades, the foundation has worked to improve access to affordable, high-quality coverage for all Americans. The Affordable Care Act has created new opportunities for more than 30 million uninsured Americans to acquire coverage. The foundation's objective is to ensure that all who are eligible for coverage know what is available to them and how to make the most of it.
Healthy Places and Practices
To help build public demand for a culture of health, the foundation will identify, support, and spread the word about individual and community actions that promote lifelong health for all Americans. It is committed to finding strong examples of places and practices reflecting a culture of health, and sharing the lessons they have to offer with others so Americans can link forces and build small victories into a national movement.
Healthy Weight for All Children
In 2007, the foundation announced that it would dedicate $500 million to reversing the childhood obesity epidemic in America. The relentless rise in childhood obesity rates has abated, and in some areas has even decreased. Moving forward, the foundation will stress the importance of achieving a healthy weight for all of our nation’s children, especially in poor communities and those of color.
Program-Related Investment
The foundation has made PRIs in the form of loans in a pooled PRI fund to improve economically disadvantaged urban communities and the lives of their residents and for an expansion of playworks to promote youth development in school. The foundation has made a PRI to provide a reserve for a loan fund serving women and minorities in medicine. In the following years, PRI support has included funding for organizations focused on the aging, the housing needs of the chronic mentally ill, and increasing the effectiveness of rural hospitals. Specifically, PRIs have supported facilities improvement and equipment acquisition, and capitalized earned income ventures and housing development projects.
Scholarship Program: Future of Nursing Scholars
"Through the Future of Nursing Scholars program, we will create a large and diverse cadre of PhD-prepared nurses who are committed to long-term leadership careers that advance science and discovery, strengthen nursing education, and bring transformational change to nursing and health care. The program will provide scholarships, mentoring, and leadership development activities, as well as postdoctoral research support, to build the capacity of this select group of future nurse leaders." In regards to the Clinical Scholars, "As of July 2014, the program had produced 1,262 scholars. In 2014, 52 Scholars are participating in the program (27 first years and 25 second years). The impact of the program can be tracked, in part, by the ascendency of Scholars to positions of leadership, their impact on health services and health policy research, including community-based participatory research, and their influence within specialty areas of health care, including pediatrics and emergency medicine." Average Scholarship: $35,000-$125,000 What Scholarship Covers: Tuition or other educational expenses; research-related expenses Degree Program: Graduate Degree Geographic Scope of Student: USA Host Countries: USA Population Served: Diverse health care leaders Program Model: Traditional; project based Additional Resources: 1) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2013/rwjf70030 2) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2012/rwjf401104 3) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2010/rwjf403883 .
Vulnerable Populations
The foundation supports finding innovative and effective ways of addressing the many factors that influence the health of our nation’s most vulnerable people. Its work in this area will focus on mental wellness and violence prevention, particularly in early childhood. The foundation believes we cannot call ourselves a healthy nation if we continue to be a violent one. The foundation has chosen to address how health is diminished by all forms of violence—child abuse, bullying, post-traumatic stress, domestic abuse, street violence—and how the cycle can be broken.
21st Century Leadership
The foundation identifies leaders who have the potential to transform our nation’s health and providing them with the support they need to realize their promise. It is committed to investing in the development of health innovators and to develop new health-focused leadership programs that connect people across sectors as well as disciplines, capitalize on technology to promote networking and mentoring, and reach and help many more individuals .
Bridging Health and Health Care
The foundation believes that for too long being healthy has been defined as not being sick. It also believes that good health extends beyond the walls of medical offices to the places where people live, learn, work and play. As such, the foundation will continue to invest in programs that bridge health and health care, balancing treatment with prevention, community action and individual responsibility.
Cost, Quality, and Value
The foundation is committed to seeking the best possible outcomes and highest value from our national investments in health care, public health and population health. This includes reducing wasteful spending, increasing the reach and efficacy of fundamental health services, and investing in the identification and spread of strategies to improve the quality and reduce the costs of health care and other health services.
Culture of Health Prize
The prize is awarded annually to honor outstanding community efforts and partnerships that are helping people live healthier lives. Winning communities will each receive a $25,000 cash prize and have their accomplishments celebrated and shared broadly with the goal of raising awareness and inspiring locally-driven change across the country. The prize is a place-based prize that honors whole U.S. communities; submissions representing the work of a single organization or initiative will not be considered. Each applicant community will be required to designate a local U.S. governmental or tax exempt public charity operating in its community to accept the $25,000 prize on the community’s behalf, should they win. Community partners can decide together how to use the funds to benefit the community; reports to RWJF or UWPHI on prize expenditures are not required. See foundation web site eligibility and selection criteria and online application process.
Equal Opportunity
The foundation works with other foundations, organizations, and businesses that have long worked to increase opportunities in education, housing, and community development to make the fruits of good health available to all. In 2013, it established Forward Promise, a $9.5 million initiative focused on promoting opportunities for the health and success of middle school and high school-aged boys and young men of color.The foundation will continue to delve more deeply into the causes of the unacceptable gaps in opportunity for good health and identify additional areas that we believe call for immediate attention.
Health Care Coverage For All
For decades, the foundation has worked to improve access to affordable, high-quality coverage for all Americans. The Affordable Care Act has created new opportunities for more than 30 million uninsured Americans to acquire coverage. The foundation's objective is to ensure that all who are eligible for coverage know what is available to them and how to make the most of it.
Healthy Places and Practices
To help build public demand for a culture of health, the foundation will identify, support, and spread the word about individual and community actions that promote lifelong health for all Americans. It is committed to finding strong examples of places and practices reflecting a culture of health, and sharing the lessons they have to offer with others so Americans can link forces and build small victories into a national movement.
Healthy Weight for All Children
In 2007, the foundation announced that it would dedicate $500 million to reversing the childhood obesity epidemic in America. The relentless rise in childhood obesity rates has abated, and in some areas has even decreased. Moving forward, the foundation will stress the importance of achieving a healthy weight for all of our nation’s children, especially in poor communities and those of color.
Program-Related Investment
The foundation has made PRIs in the form of loans in a pooled PRI fund to improve economically disadvantaged urban communities and the lives of their residents and for an expansion of playworks to promote youth development in school. The foundation has made a PRI to provide a reserve for a loan fund serving women and minorities in medicine. In the following years, PRI support has included funding for organizations focused on the aging, the housing needs of the chronic mentally ill, and increasing the effectiveness of rural hospitals. Specifically, PRIs have supported facilities improvement and equipment acquisition, and capitalized earned income ventures and housing development projects.
Scholarship Program: Future of Nursing Scholars
"Through the Future of Nursing Scholars program, we will create a large and diverse cadre of PhD-prepared nurses who are committed to long-term leadership careers that advance science and discovery, strengthen nursing education, and bring transformational change to nursing and health care. The program will provide scholarships, mentoring, and leadership development activities, as well as postdoctoral research support, to build the capacity of this select group of future nurse leaders." In regards to the Clinical Scholars, "As of July 2014, the program had produced 1,262 scholars. In 2014, 52 Scholars are participating in the program (27 first years and 25 second years). The impact of the program can be tracked, in part, by the ascendency of Scholars to positions of leadership, their impact on health services and health policy research, including community-based participatory research, and their influence within specialty areas of health care, including pediatrics and emergency medicine." Average Scholarship: $35,000-$125,000 What Scholarship Covers: Tuition or other educational expenses; research-related expenses Degree Program: Graduate Degree Geographic Scope of Student: USA Host Countries: USA Population Served: Diverse health care leaders Program Model: Traditional; project based Additional Resources: 1) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2013/rwjf70030 2) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2012/rwjf401104 3) https://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/program_results_reports/2010/rwjf403883 .
Vulnerable Populations
The foundation supports finding innovative and effective ways of addressing the many factors that influence the health of our nation’s most vulnerable people. Its work in this area will focus on mental wellness and violence prevention, particularly in early childhood. The foundation believes we cannot call ourselves a healthy nation if we continue to be a violent one. The foundation has chosen to address how health is diminished by all forms of violence—child abuse, bullying, post-traumatic stress, domestic abuse, street violence—and how the cycle can be broken.
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The foundation awards most grants through calls for proposals connected with its areas of focus. It accepts unsolicited proposals for projects that suggest new and creative approaches to solving health and health care problems. RWJF will continue to accept unsolicited proposals for the Pioneer Portfolio. Pioneer welcomes proposals for unsolicited grants at any time and issues awards throughout the year. There are no deadlines. Check web site for Open Calls for Proposals.
Application form required.
Applicants should submit the following:
- Listing of additional sources and amount of support
- Copy of current year's organizational budget and/or project budget
- Contact person
- How project's results will be evaluated or measured
- Brief history of organization and description of its mission
- Population served
- Statement of problem project will address
- Qualifications of key personnel
- Results expected from proposed grant
- How project will be sustained once grantmaker support is completed
- Timetable for implementation and evaluation of project
- Detailed description of project and amount of funding requested
Initial Approach: Electronic brief proposal
Board meeting date(s): Quarterly
Deadline(s): None
Final notification: 6 to 12 months
Additional information: If the foundation requests a full proposal, instructions will be provided regarding what information to include and how to present it. If applying for an unsolicited grant from the Pioneer Portfolio, submit a brief proposal online.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Invites Proposals for Health Data for Action Program
Deadline: December 17, 2020 Posted: November 17, 2020Giving Limitations
Giving primarily in the U.S.
No support for political organizations, international activities, programs or institutions concerned solely with specific chronic conditions or basic biomedical research.
No grants to individuals, or for ongoing general operating expenses, endowment funds, capital costs, including construction, renovation, or equipment, or research on unapproved drug therapies or devices, end-of-life care, long-term care or for physical activity for adults age 50 or older.
For fiscal year ended 2018-12-31
- Gifts Received: $21
- Expenditures: $626,585,075
- Qualifying Distributions: $523,798,459
Giving Activities include:
- $409,604,886 for grants
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990 and 990-PF Forms
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Officers and Trustees (33)
Staff (200)
Biden, Harris Name Edgewater’s Dr. Julie Morita to Join COVID-19 Advisory Board
Morita currently serves as an executive vice president at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, according. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is a...
Risa Lavizzo-Mourey Elected as HHMI Trustee
Summary Lavizzo-Mourey, University of Pennsylvania professor and former president and CEO of the Robert. Wood Johnson Foundation, will join HHMI’s...
Booth Memorial Child Development Center
In this video, supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, watch how LIIF’s investment helped...
Ann Christiano
Before joining the University of Florida, she directed communications for a portfolio of programs at the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation that create...
Interactive map helps track Camden's parks, open spaces
CAMDEN — Camden, within its nine square miles, has a surprising number of parks and green spaces, and that number is growing as access to previously...
The Rural Opportunity and Development (ROAD) Sessions
Group in partnership with the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute and with support from the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation – in...
Harvard Chemistry Professor Will Be Next President of Kavli Foundation
has been named vice president for communications at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.. Most recently he was executive vice president for...
Working Communities Challenge awards $1.9 million in grants to four communities
by of the state of Vermont and a collaboration that includes the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, The. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, NeighborWorks...
Working Communities Challenge Awards $1.9 Million in Grants to Four Vermont Communities
by of the state of Vermont and a collaboration that includes the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, The. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, NeighborWorks...
New “Healthier Democracies” initiative will bring learning about democratic innovation to the U.S.
non-partisan research and public engagement organization based in New York City, has received a grant from the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for...
Supportive Care Coalition Joins the Catholic Health Association of the United States
the Dying: A Coalition for Compassionate Care, SCC partnered in research and project development with the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Last Acts...
Biden-Harris transition team announces COVID-19 Advisory Board
Julia Morita, Executive Vice President of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.. Morita served as Health Commissioner for the City of Chicago and has...
Four Health Departments Awarded Accreditation or Reaccreditation Status by the Public Health Accreditation Board
Launched in 2011 with support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Robert Wood. Johnson Foundation, PHAB's accreditation...
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Invites Proposals for Health Data for Action Program
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has issued a call for proposals for its Health Data for Action (HD4A. See the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation...
COVID-19’s Effects on Groceries, Food Assistance Programs Worsen Food Insecurity, Health Disparities, According to New Paper
The journal issue and report, both funded by Healthy Eating Research, a national program of the Robert. Wood Johnson Foundation, mark the culmination...
Learn how Whole Child partners are supporting students social-emotional needs through online Expanded Learning Opportunities
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation featured Tacoma's COVID-19 Response, including PIERCE COUNTY...
Former NEOMED president, Dr. Jay A. Gershen, dead at 74
In 1982, he was one of six people accepted for a health policy fellowship funded by the Robert Wood Johnson. Foundation and sponsored by the...
MCW’s Syed Ahmed Partners with the Community to Address More than Symptoms
program, called PROMPT (Prevention of Opioid Misuse Through Peer Training), funded through a grant from the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, was...
Allies in Caring, Inc. Receives $50,000 Grant to Bring Local Partners Together in Hammonton NJ
About New Jersey Health Initiatives New Jersey Health Initiatives is a statewide grantmaking program of the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.....
Nov 12 2020 Research Briefing, May/June 2020
Data Across Sectors for Health (DASH), an initiative of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF),...
SNAP Supports Families and Children Across the Country
With funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, StoryCorps produced a collection of stories...
Do Health Impact Assessments Help Promote Equity Over the Long Term?
Community Research on behalf of the Health Impact Project, a collaboration of the Robert Wood Johnson. Foundation and The Pew Charitable...
A Move Toward Health Equity in Current Times
According to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, “Health equity means that everyone has a fair and...
Marcella Nunez-Smith (1981- )
and received her Masters of Health Science in 2006 at Yale University in Connecticut, where she was the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Fellow from...
Unleash the power of co-ops by donating to the Cooperative Development Foundation’s year-end fundraising drive
publications on cooperative impact and policy priorities in conjunction with NCBA CLUSA, Urban Institute and the. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.....
Online Communications from The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
-
- YouTube
- Knowledge Center
- David C. Colby, V.P., Research & Evaluation on Twitter
- The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Staff
- Pioneering Ideas Blog
- Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, C.E.O. and Pres. on Twitter
- Givesmart
- Grant Database
- Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Philanthropy Promise
- Flickr
- RSS Directory
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Independent foundation
EIN
226029397Memberships
Regional Associations of Grantmakers
- Council of New Jersey Grantmakers
- Philanthropy Network Greater Philadelphia
- Texas Grantmakers Health and Human Services
Affinity Groups
- Consortium of Foundation Libraries
- Funders' Network for Smart Growth and Livable Communities, Inc.
- Funders Together to End Homelessness
- Grantmakers for Children, Youth and Families
- Grantmakers for Effective Organizations
- Grantmakers in Aging Inc
- Grantmakers in Health
- Mission Investors Exchange
- Philanthropy Roundtable
- Social Enterprise Alliance
Publications
- Annual report (including application guidelines)
- Financial statement
- Application guidelines
- Grants list
Location
College Rd. E. and Rte. 1, P.O. Box 2316 Princeton, NJ United States 08543-2316Additional Location Information
County: Mercer
Metropolitan area: Trenton, NJ
Congressional district: New Jersey District 12
Contact Information
- Telephone: (877) 843-7953
- E-mail: mail@rwjf.org
- URL: www.rwjf.org