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For Immediate
Release
4/14/08
Contact:
Tom Golden
717-787-1350
Second Hearing on Health Centers and Care for
Low-Income and Uninsured Pennsylvanians
Tuesday, April 15 10 a.m. at the Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland
Harrisburg – As part of the ongoing effort to make quality health care more
accessible in Pennsylvania, the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee,
chaired by Sen. Ted Erickson (R-Delaware), will hold a second public hearing
tomorrow on the role that health centers play in providing care for low-income
and uninsured Pennsylvanians.
The committee will hold a second hearing on this topic on Tuesday, April 15,
10 a.m., at the Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland, Delaware County. The
hearing will be held in the Clark Center Auditorium.
Through public and private support, Community Health Centers in Pennsylvania
provide medical care to more than 600,000 residents at 190 sites each year. All
patients are provided care regardless of ability to pay or insurance status, and
one in six are uninsured. Patients pay a sliding fee based on income and family
size.
Uninsured Pennsylvanians also receive health care at Pennsylvania’s 30 free
clinics, 33 Nurse-Managed Health Centers and similar facilities.
Among the organizations scheduled to testify are: Volunteers in Medicine,
ChesPenn Health Services of Chester, Independence Blue Cross, Chester County
Health Department, Crozer-Keystone Health System, and the Hospital and
Healthsystem Association of Pennsylvania.
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