Burke Foundation commits $6.5M in multi-year investments to improve maternal and early childhood health

The Burke Foundation announced Nov. 10 $6.5 million in grants aimed at improving maternal and infant health and early childhood development in New Jersey, expanding its commitment to helping children and families in the crucial 1,000 days from pregnancy through age 2.

During that period, investments in parent-child bonding, early childhood education, and related areas help build a foundation for lifelong health and well-being — by building cognitive skills that help to narrow disparities in academic achievement, foster healthy physical development, and nurture social-emotional skills that promote future success. This can decrease costs related to health care and social services and contribute to a more equitable society.

The grants to New Jersey nonprofits reflect the foundation’s strategic shift to making fewer, larger grants that can accelerate lasting impact. These awards will support a mix of proven models and promising partnerships designed to improve lifelong health and well-being and help eliminate racial/ethnic health disparities in New Jersey.

“The foundation’s work reflects what science tells us — that the more nurturing children receive in the first 1,000 days, the healthier they will be for the rest of their lives,” said James Burke, president and board chair. “It pays off for society too, reducing long-term spending in such areas as special education, public assistance, health care and even criminal justice.”

These are the grants and what Burke believes they will help accomplish:

  • HealthySteps — $1.5 million over three years to expand an evidence-based pediatric care model that integrates child development specialists into primary care teams, so parents receive support to address their children’s behavioral, developmental and social-emotional needs from birth. This will protect momentum amid uncertain federal support and make good use of a new enhanced Medicaid payment the state launched in July.  
  • Start Strong NJ — $1.5 million over three years to help build a statewide campaign to make high-quality child care affordable for all New Jersey families. Uniting business leaders, child care educators, parents, advocates, community organizations, and funders, Start Strong NJ sees child care as essential infrastructure that is core to New Jersey’s economic competitiveness. Burke’s investment aims to make sure the next governor makes child care a high priority for helping families, educators, communities and the state’s economy thrive.
  • South Ward Wellness Center — $500,000 capital investment toward creating a $43.7 million community health hub in one of Newark’s most underserved neighborhoods will support expanded doula care; CenteringPregnancy, CenteringParenting, and HealthySteps initiatives; lactation assistance, mental health counseling, and workforce training under one roof. Developed by long-time Burke partner BRICK in collaboration with Saint James Health, the center will provide 2,000 residents annually with culturally responsive care and anchor numerous maternal and family wellness efforts.
  • Maternal and Infant Health Innovation Fund — $3 million over five years to help seed a new public-philanthropic partnership supporting the New Jersey Maternal and Infant Health Innovation Authority and its flagship Innovation Center in Trenton. Backed by $86 million in state and federal capital funding, the center will deliver maternal and infant health services, train doulas and other providers, and serve as a statewide data, research, and policy hub. As a founding funder and executive committee member, Burke will help shape pilot initiatives to reduce disparities and improve families’ health.