Black, Indigenous, and Latino families in the United States face stark inequities in maternal and child health, with pregnancy-related mortality rates for Black and American Indian/Alaska Native women more than three times those of White women. Families with young children often must navigate fragmented health, child care, and financial support systems, a process that varies widely by county and creates barriers to timely, coordinated care.
In response, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation launched its 10-year Children and Families Initiative (CFI) in 2024 to improve maternal and infant health and support healthy child development from birth to age three, with a focus on Black, Indigenous, and Latino families. CFI embraces a system of care model, emphasizing collaboration across sectors to more effectively meet families’ interconnected needs.
To catalyze this work, the Foundation needed a clear picture of how these systems are organized locally, where families face the greatest barriers, and where opportunities exist to strengthen cross-sector collaboration. This landscape assessment was designed to answer a central question:
How can health, child care, and financial support systems be strengthened and integrated to create a coordinated, family-centered system of care that improves maternal and child health outcomes?
VIVA partnered with the Foundation to conduct a three-county landscape assessment (Alameda, Fresno, Monterey) selected for their diverse populations, geographies, and system structures.
Our approach included:
The resulting system maps and landscape report provide a level of clarity that has not existed before. With this new visibility, stakeholders can:
Alameda County System Map
Monterey County Systems Map
Fresno County Systems Map
Together, the maps and report equip stakeholders to not only make smarter, equity-driven investments, but also to re-engineer health, child care, and financial support systems so they work better for families.