Community clinic faces budget cuts
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Jenny Marder
Proposed cuts to the state budget could mean layoffs and fewer
services at the Huntington Beach Community Clinic and the closure
four Orange County health clinics, which would greatly over-burden
the already busy Surf City clinic.
Huntington’s health care alternative will likely feel the crunch,
but is not in danger of going under since it gains equal support
through fund-raising efforts such as the annual duck-a-thon, said
Jacqueline Cherewick, chief executive officer of the clinic.
“Our job is to do more with less,” Cherewick said.
For many of its counterparts, however, the recommended $26 million
in cuts to the state’s mental and health care services could mean the
end.
With the state needing to cut total of $130 million from the
budget, the Huntington Beach Community Clinic could be facing
anywhere from $250,000 to $867,000 in cuts, Cherewick said.
The clinic gets $2.2 million of its $6.4-million annual budget
from state funding.
Officials at the clinic are bracing for the blow, which could mean
cutbacks in vital services such as general primary care and
preventive health care and reductions in staff.
Many patients from the closed county clinics would have no choice
but to use the community clinic, potentially increasing the wait for
an appointment from five to six weeks to eight or nine weeks, said
Isabel Becerra, director of policy and development for the Coalition
of Orange County Community Clinics.
The motto at community clinics is that providing health care early
on will prevent later illnesses.
“If you invest early on, you save money in the long run,” Becerra
said.
Of more than 20,000 people who use the clinic annually, 92% are
below federal poverty guidelines, with 42% Latino, 46% Caucasian and
8% Asian. Children younger than 18 make up 36% of patients. Most
patients are working people who don’t have access to health
insurance, Cherewick said.
The community clinic has three branches -- the Medical Center,
which provides primary care, the West County Counseling Center for
mental health care and the Community Care Dental Center.
Slightly fewer than half of the patients at Surf City’s community
clinic travel from cities outside of Huntington Beach, such as
Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Westminster and Santa Ana, to use the
clinic’s dental and mental health services. Patients pay on a sliding
scale based on income and family size.
Officials at the clinic are scraping to come up with additional
fund-raising and grants to fill the hole and to avoid cutting staff
and services.
“We’re going to try not to do that with all of our heart and
soul,” Cherewick said.
Of the clinic’s total budget, 34% comes from state funding, 32%
from fund-raising and private sources, 4% from federal sources, 3%
from county sources, 4% from local sources, 9% from donated
professional services and 14% from patient fees.
“Everywhere we can turn over a rock,” Cherewick said.
This is all happening at a time when pharmaceutical costs are on
the rise and chronic illnesses such as diabetes, hypertension and
cardiac problems are on the rise, Cherewick said. The cuts are also
affecting county services that patients in the clinic use, such as
county care for homeless and mentally ill patients, she said.
“The whole problem will put more people into an overburdened city
already,” she said. “We don’t have capacity to absorb these
patients.”
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