*This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. 1992.06.26 : Grants -- Minority Males Contact: Blake Crawford (301) 443-5224 June 26, 1992 HHS Secretary Louis W. Sullivan, M.D., today announced that approximately $2 million is being made available for grants to support new projects that will improve outreach and assistance to minority males at high risk of health and human service problems. This will bring total funding for the secretary's minority male grant program to $5 million in *This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. *This is an archive page. The links are no longer being updated. 1992. "Coordinated and comprehensive local efforts are essential if we are to remedy the complex health and social hazards that are facts of daily life for young men in many minority communities," Secretary Sullivan said. "This program, now in its third year, stimulates local strategies and interventions that can help young men learn sound health practices and earn the skills, pride and self-respect that they will need in order to contribute to our society." Grants for minority male health and human service efforts were awarded to nearly 100 communities during 1990 and 1991. "An extraordinary range of public and private organizations have become involved in these projects, and we are eager to recruit even more partners in this effort," said Assistant Secretary for Health James Mason, M.D., who heads the Public Health Service. The new funds, announced in today's Federal Register, will support three types of grants. One-year grants of up to $20,000 will support local conferences to enable service agencies and minority community groups to exchange information and develop strategies to assist minority male populations within their communities. One-year grants of up to $50,000 will support planning and development of minority community coalitions that intend to address specific health and human service problems for defined populations of high-risk minority males. Three-year grants of up to $250,000 per year will support intervention projects that will involve minority community coalitions in carrying out demonstration projects intended to ameliorate public health, social and related problems that contribute significantly to premature death or poor quality of life. "This three-pronged approach gives communities in various stages of readiness a variety of tools with which to organize their responses to the crisis of health, education and employment that affects racial and ethnic populations, and minority men in particular," said Samuel Lin, M.D., acting deputy assistant secretary for minority health. Projects may address health issues such as alcohol and other drug abuse; homicide, suicide and unintentional injuries; HIV infection and sexually transmitted diseases; or mental health problems. They also may address social issues such as unemployment, under-education, criminal backgrounds, child abuse and neglect, homelessness, teen-age pregnancy or family dysfunction. The grant program is jointly funded by HHS' Administration on Children and Families, Health Care Financing Administration, Social Security Administration and Public Health Service. It is administered by the Office of Minority Health within the Public Health Service of HHS. ###