Guided by our mission, Adventist Health serves communities by providing exceptional healthcare that extends beyond hospital walls through strategic community investments to promote health, wholeness, and hope.
Adventist Health Delano’s recent giving is defined by a large, recurring commitment to California Health Fund & Trust in Sacramento: $2,673,782 in 2025 followed by $869,881 in 2024. That pattern fits a foundation whose grantmaking is tied to community benefit work across its Central California network rather than a broad external portfolio. The stated focus areas center on community health improvement, charity care, unfunded Medicaid and Medicare support, subsidized health services, education, and research. Beneficiaries include uninsured and underinsured patients, low-income or financially vulnerable individuals, and medically underserved communities. The foundation’s mission statement describes support that extends beyond hospital walls through strategic community investments aimed at health, wholeness, and hope. Its active grant program is built around the Adventist Health Community Benefit / Giving framework, which includes local hospital sites such as Adventist Health Delano. Within that structure, grantmaking also supports community gardens and health education, alongside direct health-services assistance. The size of recent awards suggests large, operating-scale support for safety-net health needs rather than many small discretionary grants.
A central theme is direct support for health services for uninsured and underinsured patients. The foundation gave $2,673,782 to California Health Fund & Trust in Sacramento for health services tied to un/underinsured patients, and it followed with another $869,881 grant to the same organization in 2024 for uninsured and underinsured patient support. Community health improvement is another clear lane. Through its Community Benefit / Giving program, Adventist Health Delano backs local programs across its Central California network, including community gardens and health education. The foundation also aligns its giving with charity care and subsidized health services, reflecting a safety-net orientation. Education and research appear in the stated focus areas as well, placing health access alongside longer-term capacity building in the same grantmaking framework.
Recent grants are uniform in size: the p25, median, and p75 are all $869,881, indicating a single-point grant distribution in the available data. The two listed awards are both to the same California recipient in consecutive years, which shows a recurring relationship rather than one-off support. Adventist Health Delano is a nonprofit health-system foundation, and the active program description points to a community-benefit structure connected to local hospital sites in Central California. Grants are not available to individuals, and the program does not accept unsolicited requests.
$3.5M
$203.8M
$117.1M
$117.1M
Most grants fall between $870K and $870K, with a median of $870K.
25th Percentile
$870K
Median
$870K
75th Percentile
$870K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in CA.
Jason Wells
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Giving is local and entirely in California: 100% of grants go to recipients in the foundation’s headquarters state. The recipient city visible in the recent grants is Sacramento, which appears as the location for both listed awards. The active program description also places grantmaking in Central California, including the Central Valley and Delano area.
Its stated focus areas include community health improvement, charity care, unfunded Medicaid and Medicare support, subsidized health services, education, and research. The taxonomy also points to primary care access, preventive and acute health services, clinic support, care navigation and eligibility assistance, and medical debt relief or other financial-barrier reduction.
The recipient profile centers on uninsured patients, underinsured patients, low-income or financially vulnerable individuals, and medically underserved communities. The recent grants list shows support going to a California health fund and trust in Sacramento.
The available grant-size data is flat: p25, median, and p75 are all $869,881. The recent awards also include a $2,673,782 grant in 2025 and an $869,881 grant in 2024.
No. The active grant program says it does not accept unsolicited requests, and the work is organized through the Adventist Health Community Benefit / Giving framework.
Grantmaking is local and concentrated in California. The data shows 100% of grants to recipients in California, with Sacramento appearing in the recent grants and Central California, the Central Valley, and Delano named in the active program description.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| California Health Fund & Trust | Sacramento, CA | $2,673,782 | 2025 | Health services un/underinsured patients |
| CA Health Fund & Trust | Sacramento, CA | $869,881 | 2024 | Health uninsured/underinsured pt |
California Health Fund & Trust
$2,673,782Health services un/underinsured patients
CA Health Fund & Trust
$869,881Health uninsured/underinsured pt