West Side Community Health Services

West Side Community Health Services (WSCHS) is a community health care organization based in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, that serves the Twin Cities metropolitan area. It is Minnesota's largest community clinic organization, providing health care at 18 locations to some 35,000 patients.[1][2]

WSCHS was founded in 1969 as People's Health Center, a group of volunteers who worked in a church basement to provide free health care services for Spanish-speaking residents of St. Paul's West Side.[1][3][4] At first, they could work with only six or seven patients each day.[5]

Today it focuses on providing care to low-income and immigrant groups. The United States Department of Health and Human Services provides significant financial support to the organization.[6] The clinics also receive substantial funding from the state of Minnesota through the Medicaid program, although they have sometimes had trouble collecting the money from the state.[7] Many of the patients served by the organization have no insurance at all, which poses a serious financial challenge.[8]

In 2004, WSCHS began an affiliation with the Pfizer Sharing the Care program, which gives low-income patients access to prescription medications that they could not otherwise afford to buy.[2]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Nekessa Opoti (November 3, 2009), "St. Paul's West Side Community Health Service serves many immigrant communities", Twin Cities Daily Planet
  2. ^ a b "West Side Community Health Services plans to expand medicine assistance", Insight News, August 23, 2007
  3. ^ West Side Community Health Services - Official Website
  4. ^ Representative Betty McCollum (September 20, 2007), "Honoring West Side Community Health Services", Congressional Record, vol. 153, no. 140, Sunlight Foundation, p. E1935, retrieved April 12, 2012
  5. ^ "Our History: Building on Tradition". Westside Community Health Services.
  6. ^ Westside Community Health Services 2006 Financial Report
  7. ^ "State owes clinics millions of dollars", Minnesota Public Radio, February 7, 2005
  8. ^ "Insurance crisis imperils busy community clinic", St. Paul Pioneer Press, April 5, 2006
edit