Health + Home
Why Health + Home
The City of Phoenix’s growing concern about the increase in homelessness, which has tripled since 2014, has prompted a proactive and impactful response from Rooted in Grace Foundation.
Our Health + Home model provides integrated healthcare and housing in metro Phoenix to pregnant and parenting women and their children.
The model is rooted in a powerful truth: 80% of health outcomes are shaped not by clinical care, but by the social and environmental conditions in which families live, work, learn, and raise their children. We recognize that long-term family stability begins with safety, dignity, and human connection.
If you or someone you know are in need of housing or health services, please contact us:
Why We Focus on HEALTH
Across the U.S. and especially in Arizona, the need for accessible, comprehensive behavioral health and substance use treatment has never been more urgent.
- 1 in 5 adults—over 50 million Americans—experience a mental illness each year.
- 54.7% of adults with a mental illness receive no treatment at all.
- There are an estimated 350 individuals for every one mental health provider, often including professionals who are not taking new patients.
- 42% of people nationwide and 23% of Arizonans with poor mental health cannot access care due to cost.
- 27% of those needing treatment do not know where to find services or what is available.
Why We Focus on HOME
Across Arizona, pregnant and parenting women face escalating risks that traditional healthcare alone cannot address.
- In early 2024, Arizona experienced a 44% increase in pregnancy-related deaths, revealing urgent gaps in community-based support.
- Nearly half of pregnancy-associated deaths are tied to mental health or substance use, and almost all are preventable with early, stable intervention.
- In 2023, 1 in 10 babies was born preterm—148 babies every week—and 433 infants died before their first birthday.
- 27.7% of infants were born to mothers who received inadequate or no prenatal care, sharply increasing preventable risks.