Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 9 | Page 21

A fter residency and fellowship in St. Louis, Mo., my wife and I moved to Louisville in February 1989 with two very young chil- dren. I was fortunate to eventu- ally have a third child, a wonderful family, a great job and enough money that allowed me to not worry about how I would provide for them. God had truly blessed me. For years, I would say to my dad (my best friend) that I didn’t feel like I was doing enough for others. He would always answer by telling me, “you have a young family to take care of and someday there’ll be time for you to do more.” In 2007, with our children old enough, the time to do more had arrived. It was time to help those with less, especially those without insurance but who desperately needed medical care. As I initially looked for places to help, many were interested in my money. But, I had a hard time finding a place in my community to donate my time. That seems odd, I know, but true. Money is easier to give but giving precious time is what’s important. Along with my incredible wife, Sandy, and dear friend and co- worker Susan Dillon, we embarked on starting our own free clinic. My wife (who is very good at these things) came up with a won- derful name, “Have A Heart.” We had an attorney file paperwork. I asked my existing group if I could use our existing office space and equipment on Saturdays and evenings, and in February 2008 we started seeing patients. We decided the first part of our mission would be to focus on patients who were uninsured and earning less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level. It’s hard to imagine how little money that is, but for a single person it is $16,000 a year or less and for a family of three, less than $20,000/yr. It was easy back then, Sandy did the scheduling, Susan did the testing and other volunteers including myself worked up the patients and then I saw them. We used existing space with no overhead. I am not sure why, but initially I was concerned about having enough patients. Where would we find them? How would we get referrals? At that time, 12 percent of Kentuckians were uninsured and did not qualify for Medicaid; 12 percent had no medical safety net. There are some wonderful primary care clinics in the Louisville community: Park Duvalle clinics, the Family Health Centers, Family Community Clinic of St. Joe’s, Shawnee Clinic, Triad Health Clinic and Mercy Medical. Approximately 40 percent of all primary care visits to such fed- erally qualified health clinics are for cardiovascular reasons. How- ever, these clinics have no direct referral source for specialty care. The schedulers at these clinics simply reviewed a list of providers hoping to find someone to take an uninsured patient, hoping to get somebody who would be willing. We wanted “Have A Heart” to be FEATURE their direct referral clinic. We got so busy that we added an evening clinic once per month. We were still booked one to two months in advance. Of course, at the same time, it was essential to be sensitive of people’s volunteer time since we were 100 percent volunteer-serviced. I would never want to ask too much from those helping because I realized very quickly that when asked, our volunteers would answer YES without hesitation. We were helping many, but we also had a high no-show rate close to 30 percent. That meant taking valuable appointments from those waiting and that patients needing to be seen were not getting seen. The obvious, but false, belief was to think those patients were too lazy to come in. But in reality, amongst our country’s indigent population, more than 50 percent of doctor appointment “no- shows” are due to transportation issues - they can’t afford a car and are forced to rely on family, friends or public transportation. Our original office was in a more affluent part of town, typically removed from the population we were serving. The reality was that, for most patients to get to us by bus, it took at least an hour one way or by car about 10 to 15 minutes. A number of things happened around this time. First was the realization that our clinic was too far away from most of the com- munities we sought to serve. Second, our full-time medical group was acquired by our local hospital, whose indigent care did not align with ours. Third, how could we sustain a free, volunteer-only clinic without having to ask for money? The first two dilemmas were easy to figure out. We knew we needed to be closer to the people we served, with our own space and equipment. That meant we needed a lot more money. We would have to go from no overhead to having the expense of running an office, so how to sustain it took more thought. Our founders believed if there were other providers like ourselves, willing to work for fewer dollars to provide for those with less, that we could create a sustainable clinic catering to the uninsured and underinsured of our community. By billing patients with insurance, we could use that revenue to pay for the indigent population. In January 2017, we started seeing our first patients in our new office, closer to the demographics of our patients. It was adjacent to an east and west bound bus stop, therefore accessible to many. It did cost a lot of money. People were generous, and the reward was apparent. Our new patient visits doubled in the first year, test- ing was up 70 percent and the total number of patients was close behind. In addition, we started our care coordinated team for our sickest patients. We assign them a volunteer nurse and social service coordinator. We see those patients every three months, speak with them more frequently on the phone, and discuss care questions (continued on page 20) FEBRUARY 2019 19