Introduction: Free clinics provide care for those who may otherwise not have access. While this care is often free for patients, it is not free to operate such clinics. This review will provide a budget and breakdown of all expenditures at a student-run free clinic along with average costs of services provided to patients.
Methods: Accounting data was used to categorize all expenses and generate an annual budget. An inventory tracking system was developed to measure the costs of all medical supplies and services accurately, providing information on costs per clinic and costs per patient for each provided service.
Results: The average cost per clinic was $53.55 (per patient: $2.14) for general clinic supplies, $43.74 (per patient: $7.29) for telehealth, $278.47 (per patient: $12.66) for laboratory services, $247.25 (per patient: $10.75) for pharmacy services, and $8.30 (per patient: $1.19) for social work. These costs contributed to a relative minority (< 33%) of the total costs to run a free clinic, where the highest costs were for volunteer appreciation and administrative overhead. Twelve categories of expenditures (administrative overhead, volunteer appreciation, medical and lab supplies, conferences and special projects, advertising and marketing, telehealth, pharmacy, specialty clinics, chronic care, patient transportation, social work, and accounting services) were ranked in order of necessity, and methods for cost reduction were discussed for each category.
Conclusions: Categorizing costs can show where cost savings and cost-effective additions may be implemented. This study may serve as a financial and budgeting reference for other clinics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10900-023-01252-2 | DOI Listing |
J Community Health
January 2025
Department of Bioethics, The Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Building 10, Room 1C118, Bethesda, 20892, USA.
J Community Health
January 2025
Department of Medicine, University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences, 3000 Arlington Ave, Toledo, OH, 43614, USA.
Background: With 8.4% of Americans uninsured, free clinics serve as essential safety nets for underserved populations. This study compared the demographics of the patients of a student-run free to Toledo, Ohio, and national census data to evaluate health needs, barriers to care, and the characteristics of the underserved population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Health Serv
December 2024
Family & Community Medicine, University of California San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco Angeles, CA, United States.
Many students enter medical school with aspirations of expanding healthcare to underserved communities and reducing healthcare access barriers; yet they lack the leadership skills to achieve this goal. This perspective discusses the role of student-run free clinics in developing medical students' leadership abilities-problem-solving, partnership building, planning, decision-making, and resource acquisition-to address the healthcare needs of marginalized patient populations. It also discusses how fostering leadership skills in the context of serving underserved patients also develops medical students' structural competency and thus awareness of how inequities embedded within hierarchies and social institutions shape health outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext: Student-run health clinics (SRHC) are commonly utilized to provide clinical experiences to students in healthcare education programs as well as healthcare services to a target community. Recent reports on athletic training SRHCs (AT-SRHCs) with a client population of university students, employees and/or community members have reported positive patient outcomes and high patient satisfaction, however there is limited data about the treated conditions, services and value provided by AT-SRHC.
Objective: To track utilization of athletic training services at a free AT-SRHC.
Cureus
November 2024
Department of Medicine, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, USA.
Introduction: To understand the attitudes, beliefs, knowledge, and access to care surrounding sun safety for a primarily homeless or underinsured patient population at a student-run health clinic.
Methods: All adult attendees at the health clinic were invited to complete an anonymous 16-item questionnaire that assessed their sun safety history, practices, knowledge, and beliefs.
Results: Fifty participants completed our questionnaire, with 35 individuals (70%) reporting that they were without permanent residence, and 21 individuals indicating that they were uninsured or using Medicaid (42%).
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