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Low-cost health clinic is coming downtown

Summit County joining with nonprofit to fill gap in care, launch pharmacy

By Cheryl Powell
Beacon Journal medical writer

Within seven months, Summit County residents who struggle to afford medical care could have a place in downtown Akron to see a doctor and fill their prescriptions for less money.

Akron Community Health Resources Inc. is working with Summit County to establish a satellite location for its sliding-scale medical practice and dental clinic within the county's office complex on South Main Street.

The venture also will include a pharmacy that could be used by the health center's patients, as well as county employees and the public.

''We're eliminating barriers to access to care,'' said John Sniezek, the health center's chief executive.

Akron Community Health Re
sources is a federally qualified health center, a status that gives it the ability to buy prescription medicines from drug makers at substantially reduced rates for its low-income patients.

Qualifying safety-net pharmacies — known as 340B pharmacies — save an average of 25 percent to 50 percent on prescription drug purchases, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Summit County spends from $7 million to $10 million annually on prescription drugs for its employees, said Ken Jones, Summit County's director of insurance and risk management.

Though the county wouldn't get the lowest rates on medicine for its employees, it would at least break even and possibly save money by encouraging workers to fill prescriptions at the health center's on-site pharmacy, he said.

Employees would benefit from the convenience, he said, and the health center would benefit by receiving money to help support its mission of serving the uninsured and underinsured.

The concept uses ''existing dollars to create the program and fill the gap,'' said Summit County Executive Russ Pry.

County health officials estimate at least 70,000 Summit County residents lack health insurance and thousands of others are underinsured with plans that have hefty out-of-pocket costs.

''We have space to give,'' Jones said. ''We also would have employees who would help the payer mix. . . . This model makes sense.''

Financial support

The venture is getting a boost from the Heinz Family Philanthropies, a nonprofit group that has paid for about $100,000 worth of consulting work so far.

The foundation focuses on providing venture capital to efforts that improve human health and aging, the environment and women's economic opportunities.

Summit County's project is unique because it joins a safety-net health center with a local government to provide a cost-effective solution to a community need, said Jeffrey R. Lewis, president of Heinz Family Philanthropies.

If all goes as planned, the pharmacy and accompanying dental and medical clinics could open as soon as June 1, Sniezek said.

The exact price tag for the project hasn't been determined, but supporters estimate it will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. The partners probably will will ask for philanthropic support from the community to cover much of the expenses.

The new pharmacy will be owned by Akron Community Health Resources but operated by a management company, which has not been selected.

The downtown location will serve as the central pharmacy, with the health center's main location on South Arlington Street and another satellite in Kent keeping a smaller supply of medicine that could be provided directly to the patients by the doctors, Sniezek said.

Prescription assistance

The pharmacy also will have a system to help patients who qualify receive free medicine through drug makers' prescription assistance programs, Lewis said.

The pharmacy initiative will ensure Akron Community Health Resource's patients walk away from their doctor's appointment with needed prescription drugs, Sniezek said.

Today, he said, more than half the practice's patients do not follow through with their prescribed medication regimen, often because of financial or transportation issues.

''If we can, in fact, fill that prescription right at the facility,'' he said, ''this will enhance health outcomes.''

Eventually, Akron Community Health Resources could have satellite clinics throughout the region, Pry said.

Possible locations identified by Pry and Sniezek include Twinsburg Township, Lakemore and within Summit County Job and Family Services if the offices move to the current Goodyear offices after the company gets a new headquarters building.

''We have to take part of these services to the population,'' Pry said.


Cheryl Powell can be reached at 330-996-3902 or chpowell@thebeaconjournal.com.

Within seven months, Summit County residents who struggle to afford medical care could have a place in downtown Akron to see a doctor and fill their prescriptions for less money.

Get the full article here.


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IndependentMom
Akron, OH

Posted 09:55 AM, 11/16/2008

This should be done in conjunction with city-county health department clinics, whose services most people know nothing about.


May Fong
akron, oh

Posted 11:59 AM, 11/16/2008

Well why would you want to combine it with a clinic no one knows about... It would help more people to be associated with one everyone knows about........


KenmoreKid
Akron, OH

Posted 12:01 PM, 11/16/2008

Well May -- now you know about and so do many others. This sounds like an excellent plan.


Loren Eberly
Orrville, Oh

Posted 03:22 PM, 11/16/2008

Obama plans to share the wealth of compliant with demands of Natural Law (what Mother Nature, God, or Whatever Power decreed to be the reality of the real world), God, democracy, capitalism, the US Constitution, and free, fair, and affordable commerce. Fathers disqualified for affirmative action with white skin, Union workers, consumers, taxpayers, and Americas grandchildren.
Demanding every corporation, farmer, business, outsourcer sweatshop, and nonprofit, tax-exempt, organization and Church markets the cost in the wholesale and retail price of his or her product and service. Of every workers, consumers, and taxpayers living (including pension and health care). Enabling parents to love, nurse, nurture, discipline, protect, and provide, for every child (job) they conceive and fund schools, infrastructure, national security, government services, and etc.; with money derived from wages or independent business profit.
By providing nonprofit healthcare and prescription drugs for Unemployed and low-income workers, casino, keno, and lottery losers, aliens, waitresses pandering for life for $2.00 per hour, volunteers without wages, and nonunion parasites willing to work for fewer wages than they can afford life.


snowbyrd

Posted 12:45 AM, 11/17/2008

Loren: Are you smoking crack?

The economy is in crisis, Americans are unemployed, many are sick and have no insurance to cover their basic needs. I'm all for these sliding scale clinics. When are they going to come to the Tampa Bay area?


Joyce Anderson
Barberton, OH

Posted 04:40 PM, 02/06/2009

Well, how many of you would approve of the Summit County Health department buying personal medical and life insurance for residents who have enrolled in SCDH Breast/Cervical Cancer Study and when a breast and cervical cancer patient passes away the SCDH collects on the residents Life Insurance Benefits?

The purpose of voluntarily enrolling in this Breast/Cervical Cancer Project is for the SCDH to use the grants funds given to them from the Federal and State Department of Health and Federal and State Center for Disease and Control specifically to pay for the oncology tests and take the information and/or test results and devise a plan to figure out a solution to reduce the number of breast/cervical cancer patients in Summit County, not profit from learning that a resident has been diagnosed w/cancer by secretly buying her a medical insurance policy to cover the cost of these tests and collect her death benefits, which allows the SCDH to not only put the grant money they've been awarded in their pocket but pocket the death benefits too!
















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