Packard
Clinic's
medical mission goes on
The Ann
Arbor News -Saterday, Feb 24, 2007
By Stehpenie Koehn, News Special Writer
For Elina
Jerrell, medical care is a family affair that includes her three
children and
her six brothers and sisters. All are primary care patients at the
Packard
Community Clinic and are fiercely loyal to the place that has provided
their
medical care since they were babies.
“I
love the
clinic. The doctors and nurses are always there with an answer; always
willing
to help,” said Jerrell, who lives in Ypsilanti Township.
“When you call for an appointment,
they know who you are and what you need – usually before you
do. You get
treatment whether you can afford to pay or not, and if you
can’t afford
medicine, they make sure that you get it.”
Such
testimonials are commonplace among the nonprofit clinic’s
6,000 patients, about
40 percent of whom are low-income, uninsured or Medicaid patients.
“Our
mission is to provide high-quality health care to everybody, regardless
of
their ability to pay,” said Jim Frenza, chairman of the
clinic’s board of
directors. “I don’t believe we turn anybody away.
We help people manage their
health.”
The clinic
provides ongoing, rather than episodic, primary care services.
“This is not a
walk-in clinic,” Frenza said. It was founded in 1973 by Jerry
Walden, a
University of Michigan-trained physician from Cairo.
“My
motivation for opening the clinic goes back to my parents, who had
always
rooted for the underdog,” Walden said. “I was
invested from an early age in
trying to do something for someone else.”
His search
for a place where he could use his skills to make a difference in
people’s
lives took him from Ann Arbor to Nigeria and back
again, with stops in
between at Philadelphia’s General Hospital and the
federal penitentiary in Terre Haute, Ind., where he
provided medical care to
prisoners. After founding the clinic, Walden spent 33 years running the
place,
assisted for most of that time by his wife, Julie. Walden served as
medical
director and Julie, who has master’s degrees in business and
social work, as
clinic administrator.
“We’ve
seen
tremendous change,” Julie Walden said. “Last year
we did about 18,000 patient
visits. We’ve had growth in our patient base every
year.”
Additionally
in line with Jerry Walden’s vision to treat the whole person,
Julie Walden has
been instrumental in developing the clinic’s integrated
health care program,
which includes social work and psychiatric serves, nutritional
counseling,
health education programs, a walking club and even a book club.
The clinic
also started partnerships with other health-related organizations,
including
the Washtenaw Health Plan, through which the county provides health
insurance
to residents based on income. Ellen Rabinowitz, executive director of
the
Washtenaw Health Plan, said Packard provides primary care services to
about 20
percent of the plan’s membership.
“There
are
a couple of other ‘safety net’ providers in the
community, but Packard is
certainly chief among them,” Rabinowitz said. “They
provide incredible care for
people in need. Our program could not be as large as it is without
their help.”
Jerry
Walden said one of the reasons the clinic has been able to carry out
its
mission is that its clinical staff work for 35 to 40 percent less than
market
rate.
Some 60
percent of the clinic’s patients are fully insured, and a
strong contributor
base accounts for nearly 10 percent of the clinic’s budget.
Some 85 percent of
its operations are funded by patient fees, including insurance and
per-patient
stipends from the county health plan.
“It’s
been
a pleasure to treat medically underserved patients,” Jerry
Walden said. “There
are 38,000 uninsured people in Washtenaw County. It
wouldn’t be that difficult for every
physician in this area to take 5 percent of these patients. It would be
spread
across the system and Packard would have to be practically the sole
provider:
We could do it.”
Julie
Walden said she and her husband love the clinic, but decided it was
time to
step down. “It’s important to develop new
leadership,” she said. So, on Jan.
21, they both retired.
Ray
Rion, a
clinic physician for the past four years, has been named medical
director, and
the clinic’s new executive director is Kimberly Kratz, who
came to the clinic
from the Saline-based National Migrant Health Promotion.
“We
knew the
medical director had to be someone who understood the mission
… and Ray had
consistently demonstrated his commitment to our goals,” said
board member
Sharon Moore.
Rion
and
Kratz, along with the board members, will be earning their stripes
soon, as the
clinic mounts a capital campaign to raise money for its upcoming
expansion.
“It’s
a
need-based expansion,” Frenza said. “There are days
… when people are waiting
outside the door to get in.”
Frenza
said
the board hopes to double the clinic’s space, to 12,000
square feet. The
clinic’s annual budget was 1.3 million last year, barely
enough to cover
expanses, much less underwrite an extensive program of growth.
“We’re
realistic; we know the climate fore philanthropy has begun to dry up in
this
area,” Frenza said. Community support has historically been
strong, he said.
“Without even asking for it, we’ve gotten some
fairly significant gifts
already.”
On
the day
of their retirement, the Waldens were honored at a recognition program
that
drew several hundred of their staff, patients and medical providers
from
throughout the community. Held at Washtenaw Community
College, the party,
said Julie Walden, “was
absolutely fabulous.” Even news that a malfunctioning
sprinkler system caused a
major flood in the clinic offices that same day could not dampen the
festivities. “Everywhere we turned, there were patients,
contributors, friends,
government officials,” she said. “It was
overwhelming.”
The
Waldens
were particularly touches when they learned that the new building will
be named
for them.
“I
have
lots of great memories,” Jerry Walden said. “Quite
a few of the kids I
delivered were there, although they aren’t kids
anymore.”
The
Waldens
said they will continue to be involved in the clinic “in some
way.”
Jerry
Walden
said he will have more time to devote to another passion –
serving as a medical
expert in cases relating to prisoner health care. The two also intend
to write
about their experiences providing care to the medically underserved at
the
clinic.
“We’ll
miss
the responsibility of ‘leading the
charge,’” Jerry Walden said, but the pair
will have no problem finding ways to fill their time. “We
like to dance and
travel and read.”
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