organizations
12 orgs in this cluster's subtree
Every organization with primary activities in Telehealth Service Delivery or any of its descendants. Click a column header to sort. Filter by name or state above the table.
showing 12 of 12
| # | Organization | State | Revenue | Activities ↓ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CODAC HEALTH RECOVERY & WELLNESS CODAC Health Recovery & Wellness provides integrated primary care, mental health, and substance use treatment services in Tucson, Arizona. They offer a ran… | AZ | $34.1M | 6 |
| 2 | MARANA HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATION INC Marana Health Center Foundation Inc. operates a network of health centers in Pima County, Arizona, providing comprehensive medical, dental, and behavioral heal… | AZ | $114K | 6 |
| 3 | COPA Health Inc COPA Health Inc is an Arizona-based nonprofit providing integrated health and employment services for individuals with mental health challenges, disabilities, … | AZ | $71.0M | 4 |
| 4 | HEART AND STROKE RESEARCH FUND Medical practice providing pediatric, general health, and telehealth services with a focus on wellness and community health support. Offers 24-hour access via … | AZ | $108K | 4 |
| 5 | MOUNTAIN PARK HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATION Mountain Park Health Center is a nonprofit community health center providing affordable primary healthcare services to nearly 115,000 patients annually. Operat… | AZ | $0 | 4 |
| 6 | NEIGHBORHOOD OUTREACH ACCESS TO NEIGHBORHOOD OUTREACH ACCESS TO (NOAH) is a nonprofit organization providing comprehensive, integrated healthcare services in Arizona. They offer primary medic… | AZ | $67.2M | 4 |
| 7 | SPECTRUM HEALTHCARE GROUP INC Spectrum Healthcare Group is an Arizona-based healthcare provider offering integrated primary care, behavioral health, psychiatry, and pediatric services. They… | AZ | $31.6M | 4 |
| 8 | VERDE VALLEY CAREGIVERS COALITION Verde Valley Caregivers Coalition is an operational nonprofit that provides free services to over 3,900 older adults and adults with disabilities in the Verde … | AZ | $1.0M | 4 |
| 9 | CROSSROADS INC Crossroads Inc. is a licensed substance abuse treatment provider in Phoenix, Arizona, offering comprehensive residential and outpatient recovery programs for i… | AZ | $35.3M | 2 |
| 10 | HORIZON HEALTH AND WELLNESS INC Horizon Health and Wellness Inc. is an Arizona-based nonprofit integrated healthcare provider offering a wide range of services including family medicine, beha… | AZ | $41.5M | 2 |
| 11 | JEWISH FAMILY AND CHILDREN'S SERVICE Jewish Family & Children’s Service (JFCS) provides behavioral health, healthcare, and social services to individuals and families of all ages, faiths, and back… | AZ | $39.2M | 2 |
| 12 | MOUNTAIN PARK HEALTH CENTER Mountain Park Health Center is a community health provider offering medical, dental, and behavioral health services to patients in Arizona. The organization op… | AZ | $141.9M | 2 |
theories of action
strategies used in this cluster
Theories of action extracted from orgs in this subtree. Click any to see the full set of orgs running the same approach.
- Integrated Whole-Person Care 5 orgsBy co-locating and coordinating physical, behavioral, and social health services within a unified, interdisciplinary model, organizations improve health outcomes and treatment adherence, because addressing interconnected needs in a holistic, accessible manner reduces fragmentation and builds trust in care. This strategy centers on breaking down silos between medical, mental health, substance use, and social support services by delivering them in a coordinated or co-located framework. It goes beyond mere service adjacency by emphasizing team-based, patient-centered planning that reflects the interconnected nature of health and social well-being. Unlike standalone clinical or social interventions, this approach treats integration itself as the active ingredient for improving engagement, access, and long-term outcomes—particularly for vulnerable populations with complex, overlapping needs.COPA Health IncHORIZON HEALTH AND WELLNESS INCMOUNTAIN PARK HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATIONNEIGHBORHOOD OUTREACH ACCESS TO
- Peer-Based Healing and Support 4 orgsBy facilitating connections among veterans through shared experiences, mutual recognition, and peer-led initiatives, the organization fosters psychological healing, social reintegration, and sustained well-being, because shared identity and lived experience create trust, reduce isolation, and reinforce a sense of purpose. This strategy centers on leveraging the unique bond among veterans as a catalyst for emotional, social, and civic recovery. Unlike top-down service models, it relies on peer-driven engagement—through storytelling, camaraderie, mutual aid, and collective advocacy—to build trust and empower individuals. What distinguishes it is the belief that healing and reintegration are not just clinical or transactional outcomes, but relational processes rooted in shared identity and mutual respect.CODAC HEALTH RECOVERY & WELLNESSCROSSROADS INCJEWISH FAMILY AND CHILDREN'S SERVICESPECTRUM HEALTHCARE GROUP INC
- Financial Accessibility as Inclusion 3 orgsBy removing financial barriers through sliding-scale, free, or income-based access models, organizations increase equitable participation in programs, because economic constraints are a primary obstacle to engagement for marginalized or underserved populations. This strategy prioritizes inclusion by directly addressing economic inequity as a barrier to access. Unlike general outreach or program design strategies, it centers affordability as a foundational precondition for participation, ensuring that services are not only available but genuinely accessible to low-income individuals and families across diverse contexts—from nature education to workforce training and community wellness. The shared belief is that meaningful engagement cannot occur without first eliminating cost-based exclusion.MARANA HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATION INCMOUNTAIN PARK HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATIONNEIGHBORHOOD OUTREACH ACCESS TO
- Client-Centered Empowerment 1 orgBy providing nonjudgmental, personalized support and comprehensive information, individuals make autonomous reproductive decisions, because feeling respected, informed, and emotionally supported increases decisional clarity and engagement with care. This strategy centers on fostering client agency through empathetic listening, dignity-affirming engagement, and tailored education, distinguishing it from directive or medically paternalistic models. While some organizations integrate faith or incentives, the core mechanism across these groups is building trust and self-efficacy to empower choices aligned with personal values—particularly in high-stakes contexts like pregnancy and reproductive health.MARANA HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATION INC
- Dignity-Centered Service 1 orgBy treating individuals with respect, choice, and compassion in service delivery, organizations foster psychological safety and engagement, because feeling valued reduces stigma and supports long-term well-being and self-sufficiency. This strategy emphasizes the quality of human interaction in aid delivery, prioritizing dignity through client choice, respectful environments, and inclusive design. Unlike transactional models of food distribution, dignity-centered service treats the emotional and social dimensions of receiving assistance as critical to effectiveness, linking personal agency and respect to improved outcomes. It unites practices like client-choice markets, targeted hours for vulnerable groups, and homelike service spaces under a shared belief that how aid is given matters as much as what is given.VERDE VALLEY CAREGIVERS COALITION
- Holistic Youth Development 1 orgBy addressing multiple dimensions of a young person’s life—academic, emotional, social, physical, and familial—organizations produce sustained personal and academic growth, because systemic inequities require comprehensive, long-term support that nurtures the whole individual within their ecosystem. This strategy centers on integrating education, mental and physical health, family engagement, leadership, and skill-building into a unified model of youth development. Unlike narrow interventions that target a single outcome (e.g., tutoring or meals alone), this approach assumes that lasting change emerges from coordinated, long-duration support across interconnected domains. It emphasizes relationship stability, identity formation, and empowerment as core drivers of resilience and upward mobility.MARANA HEALTH CENTER FOUNDATION INC
- Hope-Centered Healing 1 orgBy cultivating hope, joy, and personal agency through emotionally affirming experiences, organizations improve psychological and physical well-being, because positive emotional states activate resilience, neuroplasticity, and engagement in recovery and care. This strategy centers emotional transformation—not just clinical treatment—as the catalyst for health and recovery. It unites diverse organizations that prioritize subjective well-being (e.g., through wishes, joy models, narrative reframing, or peer hope) by intentionally designing interventions that generate hope, meaning, and anticipation. Unlike symptom-focused or purely medical models, this approach treats emotional experience as a primary driver of change, not a secondary outcome.SPECTRUM HEALTHCARE GROUP INC
- Housing as Health 1 orgBy treating stable housing as a clinical and social determinant of health and integrating it with supportive services, organizations improve health, recovery, and self-sufficiency outcomes, because secure housing reduces stress, enables treatment engagement, and interrupts cycles of crisis and system dependency. This strategy positions housing not merely as shelter but as a foundational platform for healing and long-term stability—particularly for individuals with complex behavioral health, medical, or trauma histories. Unlike standalone housing or temporary shelter models, this approach is defined by its integration with healthcare, mental health services, and wraparound supports, grounded in the belief that health outcomes cannot be improved without first addressing the destabilizing effects of homelessness. It is distinct from purely economic or employment-focused self-sufficiency models because it prioritizes physiological and psychological safety as prerequisites to further progrCODAC HEALTH RECOVERY & WELLNESS
- Person-Centered Empowerment 1 orgBy aligning services with individual goals, strengths, and lived experiences, we foster self-sufficiency and community integration, because autonomy and personal agency are foundational to sustainable growth and well-being. This strategy centers on tailoring support to the unique needs and aspirations of each individual, rather than applying a standardized service model. It is distinguished by its consistent focus on dignity, choice, and capacity-building across diverse contexts—from employment and education to mental health and independent living—unifying otherwise distinct programs under a shared theory that empowerment arises when people lead their own development.COPA Health Inc