Tobacco Health Equity Networks

Tobacco is a social justice issue. It disproportionally harms racial and sexual minorities. The following New Mexico organizations are working towards health equity.

Fierce Pride, LGBTQ+ network of New Mexico

African American Tobacco Network of New Mexico

Nuestra Salud, Spanish-speaking network of New Mexico

Southwest Tribal Tobacco Coalition

 

National organizations working for health equity in terms of tobacco use are

Geographic Health Equity Alliance
Made up of a national network of coalitions, state programs, public health departments, national organizations, and researchers, the Geographic Health Equity Alliance identifies gaps in information, provides leadership and expertise, and promotes health interventions to reduce geographic health disparities surrounding cancer and tobacco-related risk factors.

LGBT HealthLink
Formerly The Network for LGBT Health Equity, LGBT HealthLink is a community-driven network of advocates and professionals working to enhance LGBT health by reducing tobacco, cancer, and other health disparities within their community.

National African American Tobacco Prevention Network (NAATPN)
NAATPN works closely with the research community as well its Network participants to assess the impact of tobacco on African Americans and to facilitate the development and implementation of comprehensive and community competent public health programs.

National Behavior Health Network for Tobacco and Cancer Control (NBHN)
NBHN focuses on increasing capacity and infrastructure to address health disparities, while providing network members with resources to support their efforts in eliminating cancer and tobacco disparities among people with mental illness and addictions.

National Native Network (NNN)
The National Native Network is a public health resource that serves to decrease commercial tobacco use and cancer health disparities among members of American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes across North America.

Nuestras Voces Network
Nuestras Voces (Our Voices) National Network to Reduce Tobacco-Related and Cancer Health Disparities works toward building Hispanic community infrastructure, as well as increasing partnerships with regional and national tobacco and cancer control networks and other stakeholders, to decrease tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke among Hispanics, and increase cancer prevention and management for Hispanics.

Reaching Asian Americans Pacific Islanders through Innovative Strategies to Achieve Equity in Tobacco Control and Cancer Prevention (RAISE)
RAISE works to create a network of national and local organizations that collaborate to prevent and reduce tobacco use and other cancer-related health disparities in the diverse Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) communities.

SelfMade Health Network
SelfMade Health Network seeks to eliminate cancer and tobacco-related disparities among our nation’s most vulnerable, underserved and “high-risk” populations. They support the expansion of promising practices and models about prevention, treatment, and survivorship by identifying, developing, and connecting resources to stakeholders key to changing community norms.

Description

Tobacco is a social justice issue. It disproportionally harms racial and sexual minorities. The following New Mexico organizations are working towards health equity.

Fierce Pride, LGBTQ+ network of New Mexico

African American Tobacco Network of New Mexico

Nuestra Salud, Spanish-speaking network of New Mexico

Southwest Tribal Tobacco Coalition

 

National organizations working for health equity in terms of tobacco use are

Geographic Health Equity Alliance
Made up of a national network of coalitions, state programs, public health departments, national organizations, and researchers, the Geographic Health Equity Alliance identifies gaps in information, provides leadership and expertise, and promotes health interventions to reduce geographic health disparities surrounding cancer and tobacco-related risk factors.

LGBT HealthLink
Formerly The Network for LGBT Health Equity, LGBT HealthLink is a community-driven network of advocates and professionals working to enhance LGBT health by reducing tobacco, cancer, and other health disparities within their community.

National African American Tobacco Prevention Network (NAATPN)
NAATPN works closely with the research community as well its Network participants to assess the impact of tobacco on African Americans and to facilitate the development and implementation of comprehensive and community competent public health programs.

National Behavior Health Network for Tobacco and Cancer Control (NBHN)
NBHN focuses on increasing capacity and infrastructure to address health disparities, while providing network members with resources to support their efforts in eliminating cancer and tobacco disparities among people with mental illness and addictions.

National Native Network (NNN)
The National Native Network is a public health resource that serves to decrease commercial tobacco use and cancer health disparities among members of American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes across North America.

Nuestras Voces Network
Nuestras Voces (Our Voices) National Network to Reduce Tobacco-Related and Cancer Health Disparities works toward building Hispanic community infrastructure, as well as increasing partnerships with regional and national tobacco and cancer control networks and other stakeholders, to decrease tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke among Hispanics, and increase cancer prevention and management for Hispanics.

Reaching Asian Americans Pacific Islanders through Innovative Strategies to Achieve Equity in Tobacco Control and Cancer Prevention (RAISE)
RAISE works to create a network of national and local organizations that collaborate to prevent and reduce tobacco use and other cancer-related health disparities in the diverse Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) communities.

SelfMade Health Network
SelfMade Health Network seeks to eliminate cancer and tobacco-related disparities among our nation’s most vulnerable, underserved and “high-risk” populations. They support the expansion of promising practices and models about prevention, treatment, and survivorship by identifying, developing, and connecting resources to stakeholders key to changing community norms.