Who We Are

All In: Data for Community Health is a nationwide coalition of organizations and practitioners invested in advancing health equity through multisector data sharing.

All In consists of a steering committee and several workgroups on topics of relevance to the field. Workgroups will meet regularly for networking, peer learning, expert assistance, and resource development. They will be open for anyone working in the health-equity data space to join.

Steering Committee

Vision


The network envisions a world where communities have the tools and resources they need to achieve equitable and optimal health outcomes with the support of data-driven, cross-sector collaborations.

All In wants to bring to scale the knowledge and practical lessons that can accelerate progress toward this vision. Together, All In participants build the evidence base to advance practice, identify gaps, highlight investment needs, and inform policy in the field of multisector data sharing.

History


All In was created in 2016. The network first consisted of intermediary re-granting organizations as well as their grant recipient communities who had been funded to do multisector data-sharing work in the pursuit of health equity.

The network created a space where these grantee communities could share resources, stories, and ideas with their peers to build their capacities together as they worked on their respective projects.

By 2020, All In had grown beyond its initial audience to include all types of organizations and collaborations interested in data sharing and health equity.

The pandemic, political and social shifts, and lightning-fast technology innovation showed us new ways to share and organize, new modes for learning and working, and urgent, deep-seated imperatives of equitable structural change.

All In’s introduction of hands-on workgroups will bring it more squarely in line with our values of equity, sustainability, and participatory learning and sharing. The decentralized structure also allows for shared power, shared labor, and shared vision-building in ways that our prior structure could not.