Vip Mobile Pet Clinic

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Pablo Barjavel

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Apr 27, 2024, 3:42:35 AM4/27/24
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An experienced doctoral adult-gerontology Nurse Practitioner, Renee holds a Doctor of Nursing Practice degree as well as a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. She serves as lead provider within a community-based health clinic serving adolescents and adults. She first worked in Urgent Care and is an experienced ICU nurse. Her passion for health equality directly relates to patients who are uninsured with services free of charge.

vip mobile pet clinic


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Following her passion to help those in underserved communities and populations, Sheena has worked with Second Harvest Food Bank, H.O.P.E and Easter Seals. She graduated from UNCG & NCA & TU with a Masters in Social Work. Her background is in mental health and substance use crisis services. As a Mobile Crisis Clinician, her work with Daymark Recovery Services included direct care in crisis situations as well as consultations with family, medical staff and law enforcement. Sheena is also a Program Coordinator for the mobile clinic.

Milena is a graduate of the Master of Public Health in Community Health Education (MPH) program at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. As a Program Manager in the BestHealth Education program Milena supports as a client lead direct-to-employer health, wellness and occupational medicine solution for employers in North Carolina. She holds degrees in Psychology, Political Science as well as a minor in Women's and Gender studies. Milena is also the Program Manager for the mobile clinic.

WHO and its many partners regularly deploy mobile clinics and medical teams to reach people cut off from access to health services. For many people, these mobile clinics and teams may be their only source of health care.

Mobile clinics offer flexible and viable options for treating isolated and vulnerable groups as well as to newly displaced populations. When coordinating crisis response, WHO arranges for mobile health care teams to go by foot, bike, moto, boat or vehicle.

WHO works with many different partners to support mobile clinics. WHO will keep working with its partners to scale up mobile clinic outreach in different emergency settings to reach help more people who may have no other access to health care.

Provide free health screening, prevention, education, and basic health services to underserved populations in and around Iowa City.
Utilize interdisciplinary potential from the allied health sciences at the University of Iowa.
Raise awareness of existing health resources in the community.
Connect people in the communities served by these resources.
Partner with these communities to assess their changing needs and adapt our services to reflect these changes.
Advocate for patients both in clinics and the larger social arena

The Mobile Clinic at USC works alongside the Keck School of Medicine and the JWCH Institute to provide high quality care to residents at both the men\u2019s and women\u2019s Pathways to Home Homeless Shelters in Los Angeles. Each month, we host a free clinic led by Dr. Gregerson of the John Wesley Community Health (JWCH) institute and Dr. Webb of the Keck School of Medicine, as well as Dr. Laura Mosqueda of the the Keck School of Medicine.

The University of Miami Pediatric Mobile Clinic offers free comprehensive medical care to local uninsured children. The clinic bus parks near Miami-Dade public schools, houses of worship, and community centers, making medical services more accessible to families like yours.

The entire staff is committed to offering culturally-sensitive care to patients from around the world, with extensive experience serving local families from Latin America and the Caribbean. If you are unable to fully communicate with and understand our staff in English, the mobile clinic offers medical translation services to ease communication.

The Carle Mobile Health Clinic brings affordable, non-urgent medical services to neighborhoods near you! Our 40-foot, wheelchair-friendly mobile medical clinic offers infants, children and adults full-service medical care to make sure families stay healthy.

The new 40-foot state-of-the-art mobile clinic is wheelchair accessible, has two examination rooms and dedicated staff. The clinic team will provide chronic-condition screening and education, treatment of acute illness, basic wellness care and assessments, basic lab testing, social support and work alongside other community partners.

Mayo Clinic Health System is committed to providing the expert care where you and your family need it. Whether you are seeking routine or preventive care, we have convenient and safe options available, including virtual or in-person appointments with mobile clinic care.

ONU HealthWise delivers educational outreach and health care services to support the health and wellness of our community. The team also provides clinical and educational services to improve knowledge and awareness about health and wellness concerns that impact you.

Vision statement: All residents of Hardin County will have access to interdisciplinary, quality medical care through the mobile clinic which provides disease state management and preventive health education services.

Mobile clinic services provide a link for patients to a medical care system through referrals and collaboration with area providers. For clinic operation hours and to speak with mobile clinic staff call (925) 941-7940.

Saturdays, in East Contra Costa County, the Mobile Health Clinic (MHC) provides free preventive and urgent medical care for community members who are uninsured or unable to pay for care. Patients are seen according to severity of condition and clinic capacity. Clinic registration is held during the first hour of each clinic until capacity is reached. Spanish-speaking staff members are available.

Mobile clinic services provide a link for patients to a medical care system through referrals and collaboration with area providers such as La Clinica de la Raza and Contra Costa Health Services. For clinic operation hours and to speak with mobile clinic staff call (925) 941-7940.

During the week, the MHC operates with the Contra Costa County Health Care for the Homeless program in various locations such as the Monument Community area of Concord, Bay Point, and Antioch. CCHS provides bilingual clinical and support staff while John Muir Health provides the Mobile Health Clinic and driver. For questions about the Contra Costa Health Care for the Homeless clinic call (925) 608-5300.

The state is offering mobile pop-up vaccination clinics that take place in a community-based setting like a community center, auditorium, or tent. They usually are set up short-term, for a day or evening for example, and may be offered on a regular schedule, like one day a week.

A vaccination provider will come to the organization's host-property to vaccinate individuals. Organizations are encouraged to survey individuals and confirm participation prior to requesting a clinic.

Mobile health clinics are in increasingly wide use, but evidence of their clinical impact or cost-effectiveness is limited. Using a unique data set of 5,900 patients who made a total of 10,509 visits in 2010-12 to the Family Van, an urban mobile health clinic in Massachusetts, we examined the effect of screenings and counseling provided by the clinic on blood pressure. Patients who presented with high blood pressure during their initial visit experienced average reductions of 10.7 mmHg and 6.2 mmHg in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively, during their follow-up visits. These changes were associated with 32.2 percent and 44.6 percent reductions in the relative risk of myocardial infarction and stroke, respectively, which we converted into savings using estimates of the incidence and costs of these conditions over thirty months. The savings from this reduction in blood pressure and patient-reported avoided emergency department visits produced a positive lower bound for the clinic's return on investment of 1.3. All other services of the clinic-those aimed at diabetes, obesity, and maternal health, for example-were excluded from this lower-bound estimate. Policy makers should consider mobile clinics as a delivery model for underserved communities with poor health status and high use of emergency departments.

Mobile health clinics can bring such needed health services directly to underserved populations. These clinics take many forms, including buses, vans, RVs, and trailers that can operate independently from or as extensions of existing healthcare organizations. Mobile health clinics provide a wide range of services to people who may not otherwise receive care, including urgent care, primary care, and preventive health support.

Mobile health clinics provide quality care at a lower cost than that of traditional healthcare delivery modes. According to Mobile Health Map, for every $1 spent on mobile health, $12 are saved, resulting in a return on investment of 12:1.

In emergencies, mobile health clinics save patients money by helping them avoid expensive emergency room visits. Estimates show that each mobile clinic results in an average of 600 fewer emergency room visits each year. This translates to an average savings of one-fifth of the cost of care.

Moreover, mobile clinics provide cost-effective prevention services that reduce the amount of care an individual needs over their lifetime. On average, each mobile health clinic saves 65 quality-adjusted life years (a common metric used by healthcare professionals) every year.

According to a self-report by 291 mobile health clinics, 56 percent of clinics specifically target uninsured patients, 55 percent aim to serve low-income patients, 38 percent target homeless patients, and 36 percent target rural patients.

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