91社区

From Toolkits to Test Strips: Exploring the 91社区 Clearinghouse

91社区 has lived in several places during its 65 years. Before we opened our headquarters in Boston鈥檚 Chinatown, 91社区 was based out of 95 Berkeley Street in Boston鈥檚 Back Bay/South End. Long-term partners and clients may recall our office on Washington Street in Codman Square, Dorchester. Fewer still are familiar with a suburban property located northwest of Boston. Burlington, Massachusetts is the home of 91社区’s Clearinghouse.

Partners in health promotion

The Clearinghouse provides free health promotion materials for residents and health and social service providers. Established as a joint project between 91社区 and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) in 1997, the Clearinghouse has expanded over nearly 30 years to include over 1,900 products in 21 languages, distributing millions of units of public safety and health materials annually on behalf of MDPH and several to a wide range of health and social service providers, including community health centers, hospitals, community-based organizations, and child care centers. It now also serves and and manages far more than printed and digital materials. In the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, our Clearinghouse staff became unlikely members of our frontline workforce, when demand for their services and products soared (such as the need for broad distribution of hygiene education and substance use services promotional materials). By their records, as of February 2026, the Clearinghouse has distributed over 4 million units of COVID-related materials (including flyers, wallet cards, vaccine record cards, and rapid test stickers) since March 2020.

The power of community connection

flier with title Did you wash your hands?

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just a warehouse. We connect to communities,鈥 says Tamaki West, former director of the Clearinghouse. In addition to traditional health promotion materials, like posters about handwashing and brochures about tobacco cessation, the Clearinghouse distributes a variety of products, including:

  • Basic hygiene items for children moving through the MA Department of Children and Families system,
  • COVID-19 vaccination cards,
  • 91社区 Helpline-branded items, such as mini first aid kits and sunscreen, that provide value to individuals and families in need while raising awareness about available resources.

鈥淭his service typically lives in a corporate space, but here, it lives within a public health institute,鈥 Tamaki explains. 鈥淲e think about who we are serving and the challenges they have. That鈥檚 the added value.鈥

Partner in emergency response

Allie Hunter, who joined the Clearinghouse as its director in 2025, shares Tamaki鈥檚 perspective: 鈥淭he Clearinghouse plays a significant role in getting public health information and resources out to the community.鈥 A prime example that demonstrates the value in this role happened in the Fall of 2022, when the Clearinghouse received a request for support from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health upon the arrival of Venezuelan migrants in Martha鈥檚 Vineyard.

“It was important, it was urgent,鈥 recalls Julius Juuko, senior fulfillment manager at the Clearinghouse. 鈥淲e were able to jump in and help.鈥 The Clearinghouse team coordinated the distribution of the Show Me Booklet to an emergency shelter in Bourne, MA. This publication is a communication tool for emergency shelters to reduce communication barriers. It also assists individuals with access and functional needs during an emergency.1

What鈥檚 next?

As the Clearinghouse continues to grow, the team is pushing the boundaries on expectations. In recent years, they have amplified their efforts to support harm reduction of substance use through the distribution of . These small strips of paper, which can detect the presence of fentanyl in drug samples to reduce the risk of overdose, can be ordered by Massachusetts-based providers through . Since its 2022 launch, the Clearinghouse has distributed more than 1.2 million units across the Commonwealth (through January 2026).

In addition to these test strips, health and social service providers from MA, IL, and VT can now order other harm reduction materials from the Clearinghouse. As part of the , providers in MA can rescue breathing masks and educational materials that amplify the use of rescue breaths as an important part of overdose response. And in 2026, the Clearinghouse began supporting community-based naloxone distribution in Illinois and Vermont.

With its strong roots and growing staff capacity, the Clearinghouse envisions a future where they can deliver even greater value to their partners, the communities they serve, and beyond. Expanding product offerings, serving new communities, and deepening collaboration across 91社区 and external partners are on the horizon.

For more information about the 91社区 Clearinghouse, contact us.

Hellen Ddungu and Allie Hunter tabling for the Clearinghouse at an event, 2025

This post was updated in February 2026.

  1. The Show Me Booklet has since been retired from the Clearinghouse. It is now .