BLACK mobile logo

michigan

education

Detroit releases report with plans to tackle community health issues

June 23, 2026

Detroit's Health Department has released its first comprehensive community health report since 2018, incorporating feedback from approximately 6,000 residents who identified maternal and infant health, chronic conditions, food access, and healthcare availability as priority concerns. Mayor Mary Sheffield's administration is adopting a "health in all policies" approach that integrates public health considerations across city departments including housing, transportation, and economic development. The strategy acknowledges that 90% of life expectancy is determined by community conditions rather than clinical care, focusing on addressing systemic barriers and racial disparities that have contributed to high infant mortality rates and reduced life expectancy.

Who is affected

  • Detroiters generally, particularly the 6,000 residents who participated in the Community Health Assessment
  • Mothers and caregivers facing maternal and infant health challenges
  • Infants (Detroit's infant mortality rate is 12.2 per 1,000 live births as of 2023)
  • Adolescents with special needs
  • Residents with chronic conditions and asthma (adults and children)
  • Detroit residents living below the federal poverty level (54% of whom are SNAP recipients as of 2023)
  • Residents living in "food desert" tracts
  • Urban farmers and local food producers
  • Students and families within the Detroit Public Schools Community District
  • Residents facing barriers to healthcare access due to social and economic factors

What action is being taken

  • The Detroit Health Department released its Community Health Assessment report on June 23
  • The city is implementing a "health in all policies" approach involving partnerships across city departments
  • The health department is working with coalition partners to promote health equity
  • The city is connecting residents to food-related programs
  • The city is promoting physical activity through green spaces such as the Joe Louis Greenway
  • Officials are partnering with local organizations on developing ordinances related to air pollution
  • The health department is promoting educational efforts on healthy eating, preparing and storing produce, and increasing awareness of farmers markets accepting SNAP

Why it matters

  • This comprehensive health initiative matters because it addresses long-standing systemic inequities affecting Detroit residents' health outcomes, which have been shaped by decades of policy decisions around housing, transportation, and economic inclusion. The approach recognizes that 90% of life expectancy is determined by community conditions rather than medical care alone, requiring coordination across all city departments to create meaningful change. Detroit's infant mortality rate of 12.2 per 1,000 live births remains significantly high, and over half of residents living in poverty rely on SNAP benefits, indicating severe health disparities. By adopting a holistic "health in all policies" framework, the city aims to transform health outcomes through interventions in food access, transportation, housing, and healthcare delivery rather than treating health as solely a medical issue.

What's next

  • Goal setting for maternal and infant health initiatives starting this year (2025)
  • By December 31, 2025: develop policies to improve birthing outcomes and reduce infant mortality
  • By December 31, 2025: reduce transit barriers for mothers and caregivers, expand access to healthy food and breastfeeding support, and connect adolescents with special needs to care systems
  • By December 31, 2027: host health fairs, deploy mobile health units in neighborhoods, provide healthcare services through Detroit Public Schools Community District Health Hubs, expand mental health and harm reduction training including Narcan distribution, and facilitate connections to mental health resources
  • By December 31, 2028: expand partnerships between local food systems, recreational pathways and healthcare to address chronic conditions and life expectancy barriers
  • By December 31 (year not specified): partner with urban farmers, join response efforts for SNAP-eligible residents, and advocate for funding to prevent food insecurity in food desert tracts

Read full article from source: bridgedetroit.com

Detroit releases report with plans to tackle community health issues