Huckleberry’s 2026 Commitment to Youth
Young people’s health and wellbeing are often thought of as medical care, focusing on vaccines, checkups, and treatment for illness. But equitable and meaningful health for young people goes far deeper. It’s shaped by where they live, whether they have stable housing, if they feel safe in their communities, their access to education, and the support systems around them. These are the Social Determinants of Health, and they’re crucial to whether a young person can thrive.
For nearly sixty years, Huckleberry Youth Programs has understood this reality. Since launching the nation’s first youth shelter during San Francisco’s “Summer of Love,” we’ve witnessed firsthand how factors beyond the clinic walls—housing stability, family relationships, economic security, access to education, and community safety—fundamentally determine youth wellbeing.
Understanding Social Determinants Through Real Stories
The impact of social determinants becomes clear when we look at the young people we serve. Consider Tomás (name changed to preserve client confidentiality), a 17-year-old who arrived at Huckleberry falling asleep in class, disengaged from school, and was carrying what he described as “a heaviness in his chest.”
On the surface, Tomás just wanted a job. But as our case manager built trust over two months of resume building and interview prep, deeper needs emerged: a home environment that felt unsafe with a father whose threats fueled anxiety and depression, no support for his academic struggles, and no safety plan or tools to use in crisis moments.
Tomás’ story illustrates how social determinants intersect. His mental health challenges weren’t separate from his housing, his family relationships, or his educational struggles—they were deeply interconnected. Addressing only one piece would have left him vulnerable. Instead, Huckleberry was able to ultimately provide therapy, academic tutoring, employment support, safety planning, and family counseling.
Today, Tomás has lifelong tools and stronger relationships to help him move forward.
The Data Behind the Need
When Tomás walked into Huckleberry, he wasn’t just dealing with one challenge – he was navigating an interconnected web of barriers that made simply getting through each day feel impossible. His story reflects what we see every day: young people’s health and well-being are shaped not just by access to medical care, but by where they sleep, whether they feel safe, if they have enough to eat, and whether systems work for them or against them.
For the young people we serve, social determinants of health aren’t abstract concepts. They’re daily realities that determine whether a teen can focus in school, sleep through the night, or imagine a future worth building toward. That’s why Huckleberry addresses these fundamental issues:
- Housing Insecurity: Many of our clients are experiencing homelessness or unstable housing—a fundamental barrier to health and stability
- Trauma Exposure: 95% of screened clients have experienced trauma, with 82% exposed to multiple traumas, including abuse, community violence, and domestic violence
- Economic Barriers: Most clients come from low-income households, limiting access to resources, opportunities, and basic necessities
- Systemic Marginalization: 91% of our San Francisco clients and 93% of our Marin clients are youth of color. Most of our young people face systemic barriers based on race, ethnicity, citizenship status, sexual orientation, gender identity or household income.
Why These Determinants Matter Together
These challenges aren’t isolated problems – they’re interconnected determinants that shape every aspect of a young person’s life. A teen experiencing homelessness is more likely to face food insecurity, trauma exposure, education disruption, and health complications. A young person navigating racism and poverty faces compounded stress that impacts mental health, academic achievement, and future opportunities.
Addressing symptoms alone doesn’t work. We have to address the systems and conditions creating those symptoms in the first place.
Why a Comprehensive Approach Matters
Traditional healthcare models often treat symptoms in isolation. A young person struggling with depression might receive therapy, but if they’re also experiencing homelessness, food insecurity, or violence at home, therapy alone won’t be enough. Likewise, a job or cash might ease a challenging situation, but mental health and community support are invaluable.
Huckleberry recognizes that addressing social determinants requires comprehensive, coordinated services:
- Basic Needs: Through our Youth Health Centers and Huckleberry House, we provide shelter, food, clothing, hygiene supplies, and medical care—addressing immediate survival needs
- Mental and Behavioral Health: Trauma-informed, culturally responsive therapy and counseling help youth process experiences and build resilience
- Education and Employment: Academic support, tutoring, college access programs, and job readiness services create pathways to opportunity
- Family and Community Connection: Family therapy, reunification services, and community building address the relational determinants of health
- Systems Navigation: Case managers help youth access housing, legal support, healthcare, and other resources across fragmented systems
- Prevention and Education: Health education in schools, harm reduction programs, and justice diversion prevent crises before they occur
The Path Forward: Collective Investment in Youth Wellness
Social determinants of health are the daily realities that determine whether a young person like Tomás can sleep at night, feel safe at home, succeed in school, and envision a worthwhile future. When we address housing, education, economic stability, family relationships, and community safety alongside healthcare, we create the conditions for young people to truly thrive.
This work requires all of us:
- Policy Change that prioritizes youth well-being, affordable housing, living wages, equitable education funding, and healthcare access
- Sustained Funding supporting comprehensive services rather than fragmented, crisis-only responses
- Community Partnerships coordinating care across providers, schools, health systems, and community organizations
- Collective Commitment to ensuring every young person has equitable access to the resources and opportunities that create health
As we move into the years ahead, Huckleberry remains grounded in the values that have guided us for nearly six decades: meeting young people where they are, honoring their voices, and creating pathways to healing, growth, and empowerment.
We’re not just providing services. We’re addressing the fundamental conditions that enable health and well-being.
Because when we invest in the social determinants of youth health- when we ensure young people have safe places to sleep, enough food to eat, schools that support them, communities that protect them, and systems that work for them – we invest in the future of our entire community. Join us in this vital work.
