Open on Monday Nights!!!
April 7th, 2008The CARES Clinic is pleased to announce we are now open a third evening each week. Please visit us Monday nights, in addition to Tuesdays and Thursdays, between 6:30 and 8:30. We still operate under a first come, first served basis so get here early.
Information Regarding Appointments
April 7th, 2008Although we do not accept appointments for primary care visits, we do accept appointments for physical therapy, psychiatry, and women’s services. Feel free to ask the office manager to make an appointment for you.
CARES Clinic Receives MUSC Gives Back Award
April 7th, 2008MUSC Gives Back is a student volunteer program. This program presents opportunities for students to learn about the community, provide needed services, and to document their individual efforts in support of area projects. In 2007, the CARES Clinic was the recipient of the MUSC Gives Back award in recognition of our volunteer efforts and contributions to the community.
Commonwealth CARES Classic Golf Tournament
April 7th, 2008Announcing the Inaugural Commonwealth CARES Classic Gold Invitational on May 13, 2008. Players will tee it up for a day of fun on the challenging Rees Jones, Ralston Creek Course at the Daniel Island Club. Proceeds go to the CARES Clinic. For more information or to register, please visit Commonwealth CARES Classic
More publicity for the Clinic
July 17th, 2006From The Post and Courier
July 17, 2006
Giving primary care
MUSC medical students take care of uninsured patients at Mount Pleasant clinic
By Steven Zimmerman
The Post and Courier
A group of medical students is giving back to the community by providing free care to the people who perhaps need it the most: the uninsured.
“The acronym CARES stands for Community Aid, Relief, Education and Support, and that is exactly what we try to offer the Charleston community,” said Elizabeth Edwards, director of marketing for the clinic.
The clinic began almost a year ago when Dr. Wanda Gonsalves, an assistant professor of family medicine at MUSC, saw the need for a student-run clinic in the Charleston area. Before moving to Charleston, Gonsalves worked at the University of Kentucky, where she helped students organize a similar clinic.
“Students could volunteer at Crisis Ministries, but it’s not student-run, and they limit the number of students that could participate,” said Gonsalves. “At CARES, it is a much richer experience and more similar to what students would see in primary care after they finish med school.”
East Cooper Community Outreach donated to MUSC the use of a 1,000-square-foot building at 1145 Six Mile
Road near Laing Middle School. The space became an outreach center and regular faculty office during normal weekday hours. But for three hours on Tuesday and Thursday evenings, the building operates as the CARES Clinic and fills with volunteer students and hopeful patients.
The clinic sees patients on a first-come, first-served basis starting at 6:30 p.m. The only criteria for patients is that they are uninsured and do not have access to Medicare or Medicaid. While the clinic does not perform surgeries or other advanced procedures, it does provide primary care and can even write, fill and refill certain prescriptions.
Gonsalves believes that the clinic is not only a resource for the community and the uninsured, but is also a learning experience for students.
“The students work really hard and benefit just as much as the community does,” said Gonsalves. “It’s an amazing group of young adults we are working with, and they learn a tremendous amount.” First- and second-year students can volunteer on their own or sign up for a family medicine elective called Caring for the Community, which requires them to spend five nights a semester at the CARES Clinic. Students get both administrative and patient-care experience.
Third- and fourth-year students are encouraged to volunteer as well. Older students get the benefit of cementing concepts learned in advanced classes, as well as working in a leadership role with younger students.
“Students are very willing to go out there, so it’s not hard to keep it staffed,” said Justin Ellet, a fourth-year M.D. and Ph.D. student who has been volunteering at the clinic since it began last summer. “We do a lot of services out there that students may not be exposed to in any of their time at medical school.”
Although students work with the patients, they still are supervised by two faculty volunteers. A student interviews the patient by himself and then presents the diagnosis to a licensed physician. The physician and the student then interview the patient a second time. This allows faculty members to teach students about interviewing and educating patients, filling out prescriptions and much more.
“Not only are students getting the chance to help people, but it’s also a fantastic learning experience,” said Edwards. “They are seeing patients and determining therapeutic strategies while being supervised, so who could ask for a better situation?”
The CARES Clinic will mark its first year Aug. 30. Gonsalves said that the clinic has been a great success, and there is rarely a shortage of patients or volunteers.
“This is a great way for us to help our community,” said Ellet. “We really enjoy doing it, and we hope that the community keeps utilizing our services.”