Our Work
Catalyzing action, learning, and policy change
Making Health Information a Public Good
Our work focuses on strengthening trust and engagement around health information in communities and changing the systems that shape the information we all see every day.
Eyes On Health aims to be a catalyst organization, aligning action and investment in shared field infrastructure (tools, training, common frameworks, and learning networks) so that local efforts can add up to lasting improvements in communities and in the broader information environment, both online and offline.
We also work upstream to activate stakeholders and policymakers around the bigger structural questions: How could our information ecosystem work if we truly treated health information as a public good?
We take a systems approach to help us find the right levers for meaningful change. By aligning the incentives and rules of the information environment with community needs and goals, we can move forward together.

Strategic Pillars
We focus on shifting underlying conditions so health information ecosystems serve people and communities better over time. Our strategic pillars guide how we contribute to this long-term change.
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Catalyze and align action and investment
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Promote continuous learning for measurable, lasting improvement
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Advance innovative practices to build trust, capacity, and engagement
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Activate stakeholders and policymakers around systemic change
The field of people and organizations working on health information environments is still taking shape. If you share our vision for health information that serves the public’s interest and helps communities and institutions trust each other enough to navigate health decisions together, let’s talk.
Our Values
Measurable Impact
We look for changes in policy, infrastructure, and practice that can be tracked over time.
Partnership
We back coalitions and cross‑sector collaborations over one‑off projects and connect on‑the‑ground leaders who already know their communities well.
Curiosity & Humility
We expect to learn, be surprised, and be corrected. We know community members and front‑line workers are experts in their own experience.
Equity
We ask whose voices are missing when rules about information are written – and work to change that. And we focus on communities who have been systematically underserved or misled by the current information systems.
Participation
We support approaches that invite people in, not talk at them. And we believe people affected by systems should help shape them.
