DENTON, TX | by Eric Galatas| March 30, 2019
Original article can be found at: https://www.orangeleader.com
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DENTON, Texas – Thousands of community health-center advocates, doctors, nurses, professionals, and patients are headed to the nation’s capital this week to urge their representatives to ensure long-term, stable funding.
Doreen Rue, chief executive of the nonprofit Health Services of North
Texas, said bipartisan Congressional investments in past years have helped
centers serve 28 million patients, including agricultural workers, low-income
families and people experiencing homelessness.
“To have a five-year plan provides that stability that the staff needs to
stay with the organization, and stay with the mission and continue to grow and
develop their own career paths while impacting the community in a positive
way,” she said.
In October 2017, Congress allowed the Community Health Center Fund to
expire, which accounts for about 70 percent of the federal grants the centers
rely on. In February 2018, Congress reauthorized the funds, but Rue said the
delay and uncertainty created staff recruitment and retention problems and
stalled investments in additional services and facility upgrades.
Rue called the nation’s community health centers “an American success
story.” She said centers play a critical role in keeping health costs down by
providing preventive care and are on the front lines of the opioid epidemic,
natural disasters and public-health outbreaks. Rue said centers also keep local
economies healthy by providing good-paying professional jobs and purchasing
goods and services.
“The health centers are a business and an economic driver, not just a
place to come for care,” she said. “It is integrated truly in the community and
is an important employer, as well as an asset to the community.”
According to the National Association of Community Health Centers, centers
add more than $54 billion in total economic activity each year and employ more
than 220,000 people nationally. Every federal dollar invested in health centers
generates $5.73 billion in economic activity. Federal funding for health
centers is set to expire again on Sept. 30 unless Congress acts.
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