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Dogwood Health Trust

Dogwood Health Trust

Philanthropic Fundraising Services

Asheville, North Carolina 4,810 followers

Dedicated to dramatically improving the health and wellbeing of all people and communities in Western North Carolina

About us

Dogwood Health Trust wants to help create a Western North Carolina where every generation can live, learn, earn and thrive, with dignity and opportunity for all (no exceptions). Our commitment is to foster an environment that recognizes and respects all people in this region, their values and each community’s unique qualities and attributes. At Dogwood Health Trust, we believe that embracing diversity, equity and inclusion as an organization is the absolute best and most intentional way to live into our purpose, values and guiding principles. This supports our strategy, partnerships and collaboration to achieve the greatest impact across Western North Carolina.

Website
https://dogwoodhealthtrust.org
Industry
Philanthropic Fundraising Services
Company size
11-50 employees
Headquarters
Asheville, North Carolina
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
2018

Locations

  • Primary

    890 Hendersonville Road

    Suite 300

    Asheville, North Carolina 28803, US

    Get directions

Employees at Dogwood Health Trust

Updates

  • Dogwood Health Trust reposted this

    View profile for Hayden Couvillion

    Dogwood Health Trust653 followers

    Through trusted intermediary partners, Dogwood Health Trust partnered with GiveDirectly to provide direct cash transfers to over 2,000 SNAP-eligible families in Western North Carolina. The program design was unique. 1,462 families received $1,000 in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Helene in the fall of 2024. Another 639 families received $2,200 nine months later in the summer of 2025. Our strategy, much like the Maui Fire response shared in the The Chronicle of Philanthropy article below, focused not only on immediate relief, but also longer-term recovery. In partnership with GiveDirectly, Leah Hamilton and Lila Stith at Appalachian State University Family Economic Policy Lab, evaluated the differential impacts of these cash transfers. We wanted to understand how these cash transfers were used and how they impacted individuals in our communities. Here is what the Appalachian State evaluation team found: - Folks had complete choice in how they used their transfer, and that choice enabled individuals to make decisions that were best for them. Individuals in the first cohort of payments most often used their dollars for “life-saving emergency aid” (hotel rooms, clothing, medications). While the second cohort used their transfers for “stabilizing” needs (paying bills, making home repairs, and buying school supplies).    - Researchers note a deep sense of community care in the findings. Some participants used a portion of their cash transfer to care for their neighbors or to give back to community organizations that cared for them in the aftermath of the storm.     - Cash provides opportunity. Appalachian State found modest, but meaningful, improvements in housing quality and food security. At the same time, evaluators found small gains in well-being with perceived levels of stress unchanged. Unconditional cash transfers can complement traditional disaster relief by providing individuals choice -- resulting in real, but realistically bounded relief in a moment its needed most. Full research and Chronicle article below in the comments.

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  • Today we announced a $10.5 million collaboration with Primary Care Development Corporation (PCDC) to strengthen Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and lookalikes across our 18-county region and the Qualla Boundary. Last year, FQHCs in WNC cared for nearly 200K children and families — delivering primary medical, dental and behavioral health services in communities where access can be limited. At the same time, many centers are navigating the lingering impacts of Hurricane Helene, federal funding uncertainty and ongoing operational pressures. This program-related investment offers flexible, low-cost capital and hands-on financial and operational coaching to help FQHCs today and plan for long-term sustainability. ➡️ Swipe to learn what this investment includes. 🔗 Learn more here: https://lnkd.in/e2qGuqcD #WNC #NorthCarolina #HealthEquity #PrimaryCare #CommunityHealth #FQHC

  • “Dogwood is pleased to join the North Carolina Community Foundation to support ArtsAVL and the many talented artists and small businesses in Western North Carolina’s creative sector,” said Mark D. Constantine, Ph.D., Senior Vice President of Community Investment. “The arts help us to connect, to heal and to imagine what’s possible – especially as we continue to recover from Hurricane Helene and advance the wellbeing of our region together.”   #arts #economicdevelopment #Helene

    View organization page for ArtsAVL

    897 followers

    🎉 Grant Announcement 🎉 ArtsAVL is proud to announce the launch of a $1.2 million Nonprofit Arts Recovery Grant Program to support the long-term recovery and stabilization of nonprofit arts and cultural organizations across Western North Carolina. This two-year investment recognizes that recovery from Hurricane Helene is ongoing—and that arts organizations continue to face significant operational and financial challenges as they rebuild, rehire, and restore programming. We are deeply grateful to our funding partners for making this possible the North Carolina Community Foundation’s Disaster Relief Fund and Dogwood Health Trust Together, this support will be distributed over two grant cycles in 2026 and 2027, helping arts organizations strengthen sustainability, safeguard jobs, and continue serving their communities. 🗓 Applications open March 9 🔗 Learn more at artsavl.org/recovery

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  • Reminder: Dogwood’s Next-Level Funding Webinar Series offers webinars for organizations to learn how to take their fundraising to the next level to increase grant support and diversify revenue streams. Recordings of past sessions can be found here: https://lnkd.in/gRQRGP5s The next session, Government and Foundation Grant Funding in 2026: What Nonprofits Should Know, will be held on February 25th at noon. Participants can register here: https://lnkd.in/euk58AHq

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  • Dogwood’s Next-Level Funding Webinar Series offers webinars for organizations to learn how to take their fundraising to the next level to increase grant support and diversify revenue streams. Recordings of past sessions can be found here: https://lnkd.in/gRQRGP5s The next session, Government and Foundation Grant Funding in 2026: What Nonprofits Should Know, will be held on February 25th at noon. Participants can register here: https://lnkd.in/euk58AHq

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