Essay On Community Health Center

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Community Health Centers History of the Community Health Centers One of the first major steps that began the development of community health centers was the Community Mental Health Act of 1963, signed by President John F. Kennedy (Moran, 2013). Under this law, mental health needs shifted from institutions to community-based programs that helps prevents, identifies and treats mental illnesses (Moran, 2013). Many people realized how institutions were not responding to the higher rates of patients appropriately and questioned its overall effectiveness and lack of holistic practices (Moran, 2013). Since the Community Mental Health Act of 1963, the United States worked on deinstitutionalization so communities can get the health care they needed …show more content…

After the Office of Economic Opportunity declined in 1970s, health centers became a part of Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and then a part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under Kennedy’s presidency (Taylor, 2004). The community health centers are still currently run by the Bureau of Primary Health Care and Health Resources and Services Administration found in the Department of U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (Taylor, 2004). In hopes to unify similar causes, the Health Centers Consolidation Act of 1996 merged community, homeless, migrant, and public housing into what is known as the Public Health Service Act (Taylor, 2004). This consolidation will be reviewed again in 2006 under the Health Care Safety Net Amendments of 2002 (Taylor, …show more content…

Since a significant part of the population is young females, there is a need for services regarding gynecology, family, and pediatric care (Taylor, 2004). Despite most of the population being young, diabetes and hypertension also play a role in the population and therefore, services are needed to address these issues (Taylor, 2004). Since most of health care center populations are from low income households, health care centers usually provide enabling services such as “case management, translation, transportation, outreach, eligibility assistance, and health education” as well as other comprehensive services (Taylor, 2004, p. 8). To assure health care centers are fulfilling its purposes, each health care center goes through a Performance Review Protocol where the health care center is graded more on their performance than its compliance, unlike its former Primary Care Effectiveness Review (Taylor,

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