School-Based Clinics Bridge Care Gaps After Helene

Submitted by Elisabeth on Tue, 12/10/2024 - 6:20pm

United Way is proud to have played a role in bringing School-Based Health Centers to Buncombe County. In this NC Health News article by Jennifer Fernandez, the role of School-Based health clinics in the lives of youth and families, in the wake of Helene is explored: 

When the remnants of Hurricane Helene tore through western North Carolina, nurses based in schools and medical personnel from school-based health centers jumped in to help.

One counselor and a colleague visited a family in a home that had been washed downriver, where they listened to a child’s terrifying story about swimming through her bedroom, said Charley Thompson, communications manager with Blue Ridge Health. The Hendersonville-based system supports more than three dozen school-based health centers in western North Carolina. 

The counselor spent one-on-one time with each child in the family to help them process what had happened, she said.

“We were all in such shock,” Thompson said of the storm’s aftermath. “Here we were dealing with all of these issues that we hadn’t really dealt with before.”

While schools were closed — some for several weeks — school nurses found ways to connect with students by working in shelters and distribution centers. School-based health centers set up pop-up clinics in the community and went looking for families that needed medical and mental health care.

 

 

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