Suitcase Clinic

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The Suitcase Clinic is a humanitarian student organization that has offered free services and supplies to the uninsured, homeless and low-income communities of Berkeley, California and the San Francisco Bay Area since 1989. The organization strives to promote the health and overall well-being of underserved individuals through service provision, cooperative learning, empowerment, and collective action among community and professional volunteers, students, and participants. [1] Its three clinics operate at the First Presbyterian Church of Berkeley, the St. Mark's Episcopal Church, and the Dwight Way Women's Shelter.

Contents

Students of the organization plan, manage, and carry out all clinic operations. Its student-centered model has inspired the formation of other student-run free clinics such as the UCSD Student-Run Free Clinic Project [2] and the UCLA Mobile Clinic. [3]

Overview

Founded in the summer of 1989 by a group of first year students of the UC BerkeleyUCSF Joint Medical Program, the Suitcase Clinic was formed to provide specialized services to a population which was receiving inadequate health care. [4] Originally a mobile clinic traveling by van directly to the clients, the present organization now operates out of three drop-in centers, and is structured around the principles of public health, social welfare, community activism and empathy. [1] [5] The organization embodies a holistic view of health, considering physical, mental, emotional and social well-being as equally necessary. [1]

Agenda

Staffed on an entirely volunteer basis by a variety of students and professionals from throughout the Bay Area, the organization is administered by undergraduates, with policy decided upon through consensus via the central Planning Committee legislative organ. Participating undergraduates are either currently enrolled in, or have already completed, a training and certification course offered by the Health and Medical Sciences Program at the University of California, Berkeley. Medical students operate out of the five-year UCB–UCSF Joint Medical Program, and optometry students hail from the UC Berkeley School of Optometry at Minor Hall. Professionals from within both the city of Berkeley, CA and the university cooperate with these students in order to offer medical, chiropractic, legal, and social assistance to a largely homeless and low-income clientele.

The fundamental agents of the Suitcase Clinic are the undergraduate caseworkers, who serve as advocates for clients. They are responsible for recording the social history of their client, and for ensuring that their client has received the services desired. Additional roles include establishing and maintaining positive relationships, making referrals to other agencies, providing follow-ups, fostering a non-judgmental social environment, and taking an active interest in the welfare of the client and community. Services currently offered by the three drop-in centers include health care, medication, physical examinations, hygienic supplies, vision screening, legal counsel, meals, footwashing, chiropractic, hair cutting and massage therapy.

Subdivisions

The Suitcase Clinic is an umbrella organization comprising five unique subdivisions:

General Clinic

The General Clinic is the oldest of the Suitcase Clinic's three drop-in centers, and receives up to forty clients per night on average. Clients often walk for hours daily and have limited access to showering facilities. Here, they can receive feet washing, podiatry, nail clippers, emery boards, antifungal creams and sprays, and clean socks. Dental services consist of teeth cleanings, and chiropractic services provide adjustments given by professionals. Haircutting is performed by students, who also dispense general health education and referrals for housing and insurance. Legal counsel, generally pertaining to overdue warrants, landlord–tenant disputes, and applying for financial assistance, is provided by volunteers from the East Bay Community Law Center. Medical services offer basic care and education, on-site treatment, health consultations, referrals, and free influenza vaccinations during the flu season. Medication and supplies can be issued at the discretion of the on-site physician if necessary. Optometry services perform preliminary eye examinations for clients, and if glasses are necessary, they can be provided to the client at no cost.

Women's Clinic

The Women's Clinic opened during the fall of 1996 with the intent of further reaching out to the low-income, homeless, neglected, and abused women and children who had previously formed a minority at the General Clinic. This branch offers unique resources such as homeopathy, manicure, and children's services, and cares for roughly thirty clients per night on average.

Youth/LGBTQ+ Clinic

The Youth Clinic is the most recently established drop-in center, having opened in September 2000. It is tailored specifically towards the Bay Area's homeless and street-identified youth, and popular resources include acupuncture, regularly held dinners, and arts and crafts. The city of Berkeley is a frequent destination for disenfranchised and neglected youth, due to the city's long history of social activism and inclusiveness. Despite this image, there are few actual resources available within the city to serve the specific needs of hard-to-reach street-identified youth, due in part to a reluctance amongst this population to deal with the bureaucratic intake and formal processing methods of traditional institutions. The city of Berkeley estimates that youth between the ages of thirteen and twenty-three account for 100–200 of the homeless population within the city, and youth living on the street are extremely vulnerable to suicide, HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections, traumatic injury, infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, teenage pregnancy, asthma and infestations [6] .

SHARE

SHARE, an acronym for "Searching How to Achieve Respect and Empowerment", was officially launched in May 1996. It is a discussion and advocacy group with the goal of strengthening the solidarity of the Suitcase Clinic's diverse community . Led by trained student facilitators, SHARE provides a uniquely open forum, allowing clientele to discuss current affairs and exchange opinions with student volunteers through presentations, movies, community participation and political action.

Suitcase Clinic Class (HMS 98/198)

Health and Medical Science (HMS) 98/198 is a course offered at UC Berkeley which provides the training requisite for the operations in the three clinics. The class is entirely organized and run by student volunteers. [7] Students delve into topics of public health, in social welfare, in cultivating empathy and compassion, and in working with the homeless or other underserved populations. The first six weeks cover caseworker training, and the remainder of the semester is spent addressing specific topics such as drug and alcohol abuse, mental health, and personal accounts of homelessness.

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 "General Info". Suitcase Clinic.
  2. "UCSD Students and Staff Offer Free Healthcare". La Prensa San Diego. July 23, 2010. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  3. "Community Impact: student-run clinics". July 25, 2012. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  4. Bonnie Azab Powell (March 8, 2006). "Suitcase Clinic student volunteers are changing the world, one bare footstep at a time". UC Berkeley News.
  5. "Agency - Suitcase Clinic". Archived from the original on April 12, 2013. Retrieved February 25, 2013.
  6. "Youth / LGBTQ+ Clinic". The Suitcase Clinic. October 19, 2009. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  7. Steinbach, Alan; Swartzberg, John (May 2001). "The Berkeley Suitcase Clinic: Homeless Services by Undergraduate and Medical Student Teams". Academic Medicine. 76 (5): 524. doi: 10.1097/00001888-200105000-00058 . PMID   11346565.