Health Center 1 Sale

WHYY

A $150 million, 300,000-square-foot mixed-use development is planned for 500 S. Broad St., where Philadelphia’s premier public sexual-health clinic once operated.

https://whyy.org/articles/150m-mixed-use-development-planned-for-ex-health-clinic-at-broad-and-lombard/

By Jake Blumgart

Philly Tribune

An estimated 9,928 patients used the District Health Center No. 1 through the first six months of this year before the services were moved, according to the city’s Department of Health.

https://www.phillytrib.com/news/local_news/black-owned-firm-to-help-transform-south-broad-street-site/article_660fc231-bdb3-5547-8abe-30802496878a.html

By Mike D’Onofrio

Health Center 10 Pediatrics Suite

Philadelphia Department of Public Health officials on Wednesday, June 12, cut the ribbon on a new pediatric suite at Health Center 10, the Northeast’s only community health center and the busiest city-run clinic.

Officials hope the $500,000-plus project will allow the doctors at Health Center 10, 2320 Cottman Ave., to see additional children in a more timely manner.

https://northeasttimes.com/2019/06/20/cottman-avenue-health-center-gets-new-pediatric-suite/

By Jack Tomczuk

Helping Mind and Body in City Health Centers

Life can be stressful for all of us.  Life can be far more stressful for someone who has lost a child to gun violence, or lost a job, or been evicted from her home.  The mental toll that these experiences take can lead to or worsen physical illness.  So it makes sense – even if it’s not common – for medical clinics to care for their patients’ mental health as well as their physical health.  Our City health centers now offer the support of Behavioral Health Consultants (BHCs) to help manage the life stress of our patients.

https://www.phila.gov/2019-06-18-helping-mind-and-body-in-city-health-centers/

New Health Center

James Garrow, a spokesman for the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, said the city is still in the early stages of planning for the new center. It would be in addition to the city-operated Health Center 10 at 2230 Cottman Ave.

“We’re excited to start this process, and we acknowledge that it will be a long process,” Garrow said in an email. “As we work out the details, we’ll have a better understanding of a timeline and potential location, aside from it being placed in the lower Northeast.”

https://northeasttimes.com/2019/03/15/kenney-presents-5-billion-budget-proposal-with-no-tax-increases/

By Jack Tomczuk

Access to Care Report

Press Release

PHILADELPHIA — This morning, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, with the support of the University of Pennsylvania Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, released a report on the state of primary medical care in Philadelphia, Staying Healthy: Access to Primary Care in Philadelphia. This report found that while the total number of primary care providers in the city continues to rise, some neighborhoods–the Northeast and Southwest Philadelphia–have a significantly lower supply of primary care providers than other parts of the city.

https://mailchi.mp/phila.gov/new-health-department-report-shows-lack-of-access-to-primary-care-providers-plaguing-some-neighborhoods

KYW

In a city with more than 30 hospitals and five medical schools, it might seem that proximity to basic health care would not be a problem.

But the new report finds that parts of the Northeast and Southwest are officially “primary care shortage areas,” with one provider for every 3,500 people, far below the citywide average of one per 1,200 people.

https://kywnewsradio.radio.com/articles/news/philadelphia-health-department-report-shows-problem-citys-health-care-system

By Pat Loeb

Inquirer

Currently, there is a six-month wait for a doctor’s appointment, said Joan Bland, the clinic’s director and a nurse. For a walk-in, there is at least a half-hour wait to see a health-care provider, she said. The clinic is adding patient exam rooms in the basement, and has hired more nurse-practitioners to help with the patient load.

The clinic is in an area rich with diversity. There are 12 interpreters on staff for patients who speak Chinese, Spanish, Russian, Hindi, and Urdu, among other languages. Six staff members, who all speak at least two languages, help patients set up insurance, Bland said.

http://www2.philly.com/philly/health/philadelphia-health-primary-health-care-desert-20181023.html

By Mari Schaefer

WHYY

If the place had the feeling of bursting at the seams, it’s because it is – Health Center 10 is by far the busiest of the eight primary care health centers run by the Philadelphia Department of Public Health. It sees 67,000 patient visits a year, and new patients add their names to a long waiting list for appointments. City clinics treat patients regardless of insurance status — making them the only option for many families. On Tuesday, the sound of a construction crew hammering away in the basement reverberated through the building – an effort to expand the number of exam rooms spaces.

https://whyy.org/articles/health-care-by-zip-code-some-philly-neighborhoods-are-primary-care-deserts/

By Nina Feldman

Philly Tribune

The study released on Tuesday by the Philadelphia Department of Public Health indicates that while the total number of primary care providers in the city continues to rise, some neighborhoods — the Northeast and Southwest Philadelphia — have a significantly lower supply of primary care providers than other parts of the city.

This shortage means that these areas, commonly low-income and with high proportions of racial and ethnic minorities, are forced to wait longer to see their primary care providers for routine appointments. For residents who utilize Medicaid as their health insurance, this report finds that many providers who accept Medicaid as insurance nonetheless do not make appointments available for Medicaid patients.

http://www.phillytrib.com/report-finds-that-some-neighborhoods-lack-access-to-primary-care/article_71528c1a-a172-57e2-879e-fb7ed7fe258d.html

By staff