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New Health Center To Care For Underserved Residents
Friday, February 10, 2006
COLUMBIA, MD (February 10, 2006) - The Horizon Foundation today announced that a new health center will be created in Columbia, MD, to serve uninsured and underinsured Howard County residents as well as others lacking access to readily available and affordable primary health care. This would also include those who are Medicaid and Medicare beneficiaries.
Over the next several months, the Health Alliance, a free clinic currently providing services for county residents who lack access to health care, will be assessing how it can integrate its services with the new center.
The new health center
represents a partnership between the
Foundation,
Chase Brexton Health Services,
Inc. and the Maryland Community
Health System. As a Federally
Qualified Health Center, the health
center is eligible to receive
federal support to provide basic
health care for county
residents. It will be located in the Knoll
North Building in Oakland
Mills, an original site of the former
Columbia Medical
Plan.
New Health Center to Serve Uninsured Patients
Thursday, March 16, 2006(The View from Ellicott City) -- Residents
who lack health insurance will
soon have access to primary health care close
to home, as a new non-profit
health center is set to open for July in
Columbia.
The center, to be
located on the site of former Columbia Medical
Plan in Oakland Mills, will serve
residents with little or no insurance,
including those using Medicaid and
Medicare.
The project is a joint effort
between the local philanthropic
Horizon Foundation, Chase Brexton Health
Services and the Maryland Community
Health System. The facility will be
managed by Chase Brexton and, as a
federally qualified health center, will be
under the MCHC umbrella.
"We
identified an area in Columbia where there are
people who were uninsured and
underinsured," explained Chase Brexton
spokeswoman Franny Lerner. "Even though
Howard County is a very affluent county, there
are about 15,000 uninsured
residents."
According to Horizon
research, more than 41 percent of
uninsured residents earn less than $25,000 per
year. Low-income residents
usually don't get medical attention on a
regular basis and end up going to
Howard County General Hospital when faced with
an emergency.
Many
residents of Oakland Mills, the designated
location of the Chase Brexton center,
lack access to health care, said Richard
Krieg, Horizon's president and
CEO.
The opening of the new facility
will be the result of the two years'
worth of work by the foundation's planning
team. The center received federal
funding last month.
The only clinic
currently serving underinsured
patients is the Health Alliance, also located
in Columbia and mostly funded by
Horizon.
The Health Alliance announced
it would be closing in July and
moving its services to the new center.
Manager Pam Mack said the Health
Alliance will be working closely with Chase
Brexton so existing patients can
seamlessly transition to that
center.
Chase Brexton may also interview
Health Alliance employees interested in
working for the new center, she
said.
Krieg said the center will
provide primary health care for several
thousands people. The Health Alliance
currently serves about 300 patients with
chronic medical problems.
"This new
facility is a major milestone in
meeting the healthcare needs of thousands of
county residents. Many of them are
working adults who, for various reasons, can't
afford health insurance," he said
in a press release.
The center will
open with a physician, nurse
practitioner and some support staff. The
number of staff members and services
will increase during the first year of
operation.
Initially there will be
eight exam rooms and space for substance abuse
treatment, smoking cessation,
HIV/AIDS treatment, dental care, mental health
care and other
services.
The facility will rely on
Medicare and Medicaid funding so
patients can pay on a sliding fee
scale.
Although the option of very
low-cost care is available, Krieg said
patients will be able to pay more, noting
that "people, when they can pay, like
contributing to their own
healthcare."
Chase Brexton, a
Baltimore-based nonprofit organization,
originally opened as a gay clinic and has
since aimed to serve all people who
have traditionally lacked access to health
care.
Most of its patients are
not gay or lesbian, although "we strive to
make sure all our health centers are
welcoming to that community," Lerner
said. "It's a comfortable setting for
diverse populations."
The Horizon
Foundation, located in Columbia, aims
to promote community health and wellness
through various partnerships, grants
and initiatives. It was established in
1998 as a product of the merger between
Johns Hopkins Medicine with Howard County
General Hospital.
The details
of the facility's layout have not been
finalized, but it will conform to the
size of the existing site. Krieg said an
architect has been retained, the floor
plan is in the last stages of completion and
the facility will be "very modern
and up-to-date."