An artist, gamer, and movie lover, Curtis McLaughlin (above) has been part of the Health Care for the Homeless Art Group for more than five years.
Art is one of my coping skills. I can be anywhere and create art wherever I go.
01.10.17
You, as staff members, make our annual Thank-a-Thon happen. Here’s how it works. You and your colleagues come together to make phone calls and extend a simple thank you to the private donors who help make our work possible. As a Thank-a-Thon participant, you’ll get a brief orientation and basic script to guide you during your calls, and—unlike a phone-a-thon—you won’t have to ask for a penny! All you need to do is say thanks.
Please join us.
DATE: Tuesday, January 17
TIME: 5-7 p.m.
LOCATION: 421 Fallsway, 3rd floor group room
To join in this fun after-hours event, please RSVP to Amy Tarleton at atarleton@hchmd.org.
An artist, gamer, and movie lover, Curtis McLaughlin (above) has been part of the Health Care for the Homeless Art Group for more than five years.
Art is one of my coping skills. I can be anywhere and create art wherever I go.
Client storytelling is a staple of the nonprofit business model, ever present in advocacy, clinic tours, fundraising—and news articles like the one you are reading right now.
The Trans Rights Advocacy Coalition (TRAC) has been the driving force in championing trans rights policy changes in Maryland. Due to stigma and structural discrimination, transgender people—particularly transgender people of color—experience high rates of homelessness. Following the implementation of the Trans Health Equity Act in January, we talked with TRAC leadership about their work and community.
Since starting in January 2022, REI Health Specialist Arie Hayre-Somuah, LMSW, MPH has worked with our clinical teams to identify health disparities and move us closer to health equity. This year, she is turning her focus to the topic of health literacy.