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Published Monday, November 16, 2009 in Local
By Jeff Bishop
The Times-Herald
With health care reform passing the House and now hitting the home stretch in the U.S. Senate, the Georgia Public Policy Foundation is saying the charity clinic model such as one being pitched locally by Coweta Samaritan Clinic, Inc. should be a part of the national conversation.
Dr. Kay Crosby made her case for the Coweta Samaritan Clinic Inc. before the Coweta County Hospital Authority last week. The new proposed clinic is seeking anywhere from $90,000 to $100,000 to get the project off the ground.
Ross Mason of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation says Georgia's 100-plus charity clinics cared for more than 175,000 patients in 2008.
Community-based clinics use volunteers to provide care and charge little to nothing for patients who have no other means of accessing health care, he said. Georgia's charity clinics provide between $200 million and $400 million annually in uncompensated care, according to a 2005 state auditor's report.
"That amount will likely be even greater this year because of the rising number of unemployed," said Mason.
"The federal government needs to recognize the savings to taxpayers resulting from the important and mostly invisible role these clinics play in the American health care delivery system," he said.
In 2008, the nation's 1,200 charity clinics served 4 million patients.
"That's 4 million patients, often without the ability to pay, who didn't use government programs for their health care," he said. "These facts should prompt President Obama to give charity clinics a seat at the table to help devise a health care strategy for the 21st century."
Crosby, who spent 20 years at the PAPP Clinic in Newnan, will be the director of the new proposed local clinic.
Crosby told the hospital authority that she and the others behind the proposed clinic are trying to drum up support in the community. The new clinic will be located in a former medical office at the corner of Jefferson and Lee streets in downtown Newnan, near the old Newnan Municipal Building.
"We are trying to put together a health clinic to treat the uninsured and the underinsured," she said.
Crosby said there's a "large population" of "working poor" who are under 65 and don't qualify for either Medicare or Medicaid.
"They don't have a place to get health care," she said, and often wind up in the emergency room, even when that's not the most appropriate place for them.
She said this is going to continue to be a problem in Coweta because "the population is growing, but wages are not."
The PAPP Clinic, Piedmont Hospital, One Roof Ecumenical Outreach, the Coweta County County Health Department, and others are joining together to help make the Coweta Samaritan Clinic a reality, she said.
"Many of these people have lost that physician-patient relationship," she said. "They're not getting the care they need for what are often chronic health problems."
Crosby said her group has been studying similar clinics and surrounding counties to "learn from them."
A needs assessment has now been undertaken, and the group is applying for 501c3 tax-exempt status. They have also applied for a federal planning grant.
"Of course, to do any of this, it takes money," she said.
The Georgia Public Policy Foundation was established in 1991 to give business a united voice as they faced state policy makers.
"As the nation's unemployment rate approaches double digits, the uninsured problem is going to become more critical," said Rogers Wade, president of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.
"In many cases, charitable clinics will be the only solution for Americans who have lost their health insurance and can't afford COBRA or another temporary health policy.
"These newly-uninsured often cannot access government programs and depend upon the care of physicians willing to donate their time at charity clinics," he said.
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Forty years after being one of the pioneers of socialized medicine, Castonguay's commission advocates both an increased role for private enterprise in medicine and increased public investment in the socialized system both through taxes and through user fees. Castonguay was quoted as saying "We are proposing to give a greater role to the private sector so that people can exercise freedom of choice."[3] While concerned about the financial stresses the system places on the government, Castonguay does not advocate dismantling publicly financed health insurance altogether
Posted by Fred at 11:57 AM
TK, name the source of your 40K body count, please. Canada has more than just a 'problem.' I am 100% anti-government when it comes to them being in charge of health care. I am 100% FOR an individual's choice and control over his/her care. It's a doctor-patient thing, not a doctor-patient-bureaucrat thing. I'd say that's about as 'pro-employee' a position as can be taken. Your argument about failed businesses makes no sense. My employer (yeah, a mean ol' business) doesn't provide or, as you say, "manage" my health care. They only provide my health care INSURANCE. See the difference? Based on your comments, I'd say you are anti-employer and somehow you think the government should do something for you or perhaps owes you something somehow. It doesn't. Good luck and good health... you're gonna need it!
Posted by Reader at 10:18 PM
T
Posted by Reader at 10:02 PM
Wow Pro-clinic can step over dollars picking up a penny. While stepping over the 40,000 who die every year here hey he found a problem in Canada.
Unfortunately, looks like we are not going to get health reform just mandated coverage.
Still no choice and still no patient centered care, just maximizing profits.
You are not anti-government just anti-employee pro-employer. After all private business is so good, look at what's happened just to the local banks. They can't manage their own business and yet we want employers managing our health care?
Posted by turfkiller at 8:56 PM
Fred, Google 'Claude Castonguay' or the phrase "failing Canadian Health System." You'll receive quite an education. Don't take it from me. See for yourself. Costonguay is the architect of Candian socialist medicine. He admits its failure. Why is it failing? Visit FraserAmericadotorg and peruse their news releases to read detailed facts. Quite eye-opening.
Posted by Pro-clinic; Anti-government run health care at 12:20 PM
So how has the Candian system failed. Last I looked Americans were going to Canada to get cheap prescriptions.
Posted by Fred at 11:52 AM
I think the clinic is an outstanding idea. My main complaint about this story, Jeff, is that the behemoth health care legislation is NOWHERE near the homestretch in the Senate. Thank God for that! Let common sense and freedom prevail, NOT socialized medicine based on failed foreign models (Canada, Belgium, etc.) WAKE UP!
Posted by Pro-clinic; Anti-government run health care at 9:08 AM
clinic
11/19/2009
Link To This Comment
The first thing done to get anything up and running in a socialist system is to apply for a 501c3 tax exempt status. Next apply for a Federal grant.
This is NOT free money. This is money taxpayers have PAID to the government. Don't go bowing and scraping to your ward boss or county commissioner for this clinic. Thank a taxpayer, their children, and grandchildren.
Posted by Sissy at 12:19 AM