AHA Community Health Improvement (ACHI) AHA Community Health Improvement (ACHI) Find content about AHA's Association for Community Health Improvement, which aims to advance healthy communities by providing members with education, professional development, resources and engagement opportunities in the fields of community health, population health and community benefit
Community Health Improvement Week | Center | AHA Join the ACHI network to learn about best practices population and community health leaders are using to address health disparities in their communities and stay updated on the important community health improvement conversations taking place throughout the year Thank you to The Children's Hospital Association for sponsoring CHI Week 2026!
ACHI releases new CHA Toolkit resources | AHA News AHA’s Community Health Improvement network has added new resources to its Community Health Assessment Toolkit, including four new supplements focusing on how to involve specific populations in the CHA process
installation - Should AHCI be enabled for an SSD? - Super User I would enable AHCI, because: It often boosts performance (your SSD might be an exception, but if you run a SSD and a HDD then the HDD will get some boost) It offers additional features (e g hot-plugging drives) It is enabled just about everywhere else and having a system unexpectedly in a ancient compatibility mode would throw me for a loop I realise this might be a personal thing
Switch RAID to AHCI without reinstalling Windows 10 My Dell XPS 9560 uses RAID as a SATA controller mode After I change it to AHCI, the Windows 10 will not boot What should I do if I don't want to reinstall Windows 10? RAID = Redundant Array of
How to enable AHCI in Windows XP without reinstalling I'll start with why you cannot use AHCI mode without modification When Windows is installed, it only installs (enables) AHCI RAID drivers if you have a storage controller it recognises as AHCI RAID Windows Vista and 7 would (usually) have the drivers anyway, but typically disable them Vista and 7 come with a generic AHCI driver, with a more hardware-specific driver potentially available
Cant restore Windows 11 after changing BIOS RAID (RST) to AHCI I need to change my BIOS to AHCI to support a dual-boot Windows Linux configuration I took care to create a Windows 11 System Image on an external drive and a System Repair DVD before doing anything
Changed from AHCI to RAID and now Windows wont boot If I change to ACHI mode it's listed If I stay in RAID mode and try, it gets listed once I try AND fail the install of the drivers One thing to note, perhaps My boot priority is that it's Linux and then in the grub menu I added the windows drive so that I can choose what OS to boot into at that point