Women in Health Collaborative Grants Total $250,000

Women’s Foundation of Indiana is proud to announce the 2026 recipients of the Women in Health Collaborative Fund, which mobilizes the expertise, resources, and lived experience of women in healthcare to improve health outcomes for women and girls in Central Indiana.

Through a participatory grantmaking process, more than 50 donors—women who work in healthcare—joined together to fund eight grants totaling $250,000.

2026 Grantee Partners

  • $40,000 – Community Alliance of the Far Eastside: Maternal Health Services
  • $40,000 – Flanner House of Indianapolis: Mental Health and Trauma Care
  • $40,000 – Gennesaret Free Clinic: Women’s Reproductive Health Expansion
  • $30,000 – Girl Talk: Mothers Supporting Mothers
  • $10,000 – Indiana Immunization Coalition: HPV Infection and Cervical Cancers Education Campaign
  • $35,000 – Indiana Task Force Foundation: Free Emergency Contraception and Sexual Health Materials Through Vending Machines
  • $40,000 – Irvington Counseling Collective: Perinatal Mental Health Services
  • $15,000 – Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, HI, AL, IN, KY: Safety Net Sexual and Reproductive Health Services

About the Women in Health Collaborative Fund

Launched in 2024, the Women in Health Collaborative Fund is an initiative of Women’s Fund designed to unite nurse practitioners, physicians, administrators, doulas, behavioral health specialists, and others across the healthcare field. Donors raise funds together, then collaboratively decide which solutions should be supported through grants.

This work was made possible thanks to generous support from IU Health, a private family foundation, and dozens of individual donors.

This is what collective power looks like. At Women’s Foundation, we believe in listening to women. They told us that women’s health is a top priority—and that’s why we created these grants. And because we trust the expertise that comes from lived experience, we chose a participatory grantmaking process that lets women in healthcare—not only those doing the work, but those investing in it—decide where the money should go.
Tamara Winfrey-Harris, president of Women’s Foundation