Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers (SSCHC) have provided free and affordable health care services to low-income patients since 1969.[1] That year, neighborhood organizers opened a small, volunteer-run health clinic at the corner of South 16th Street and West Greenfield Avenue.[2] Since its earliest days, SSCHC has worked to serve the needs of the South Side’s growing Spanish-speaking population through a variety of bilingual services.[3] SSCHC now provides health care, education, and social services to tens of thousands of patients annually at locations throughout Milwaukee’s south side and in the neighboring city of Waukesha.[4]
Footnotes [+]
- ^ “The History of Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers,” Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers, accessed September 8, 2013; Amrita Aulakh, “Neighborhood Health Clinics Growing Busier: One Community-Based Center Has Seen 400% Jump in Visits since 1990,” Milwaukee Journal, September 19, 1994; “Free Health Physicals,” La Guardia, June 1970.
- ^ Health Organization for Public Ethics, 16th Street Community Health Center: Health Care, Education, Counseling, Advocacy [pamphlet] (Milwaukee, WI: 1977); Health Organization for Public Ethics, 16th Street Community Health Center 1977 Annual Report (Milwaukee, WI: 1977); Tom Held, “Latino Numbers Booming,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, August 11, 2005; “Cumunal Clinicas de Salud del Sul,” La Guardia, December 1971; “The History of Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers,” Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers, accessed September 8, 2013.
- ^ Health Organization for Public Ethics, 16th Street Community Health Center: Health Care, Education, Counseling, Advocacy [pamphlet] (Milwaukee, WI: 1977); Health Organization for Public Ethics, 16th Street Community Health Center 1977 Annual Report (Milwaukee, WI: 1977); Tom Held, “Latino Numbers Booming,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, August 11, 2005; “Cumunal Clinicas de Salud del Sul,” La Guardia, December 1971; “The History of Sixteenth Street Community Health Center,” Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers, accessed September 8, 2013.
- ^ “Locations,” Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers, accessed September 23, 2013; Tom Held, “Latino Numbers Booming,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, August 11, 2005; “The History of Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers,” Sixteenth Street Community Health Centers, accessed September 8, 2013; Amrita Aulakh, “For Young, Old Patients, Clinic Is the Family Doctor,” Milwaukee Journal, September 19, 1994; Amrita Aulakh, “Neighborhood Health Clinics Growing Busier: One Community-Based Center Has Seen 400% Jump in Visits Since 1990,” Milwaukee Journal, September 19, 1994.
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