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University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

Health Care Access and Immediate Care Clinics

A Milwaukee clinic fills a need but faces failure, By Kevin Sack, September 1, 2009, New York Times: “Like many low-income neighborhoods, the north side of Milwaukee has seen a gradual depletion of its primary care doctors over the last two decades. One by one, they have retired or surrendered to financial reality, rarely to be replaced. At the few remaining practices, the wait for an appointment can make it almost purposeless to seek one. When Martha Brown’s 3-year-old daughter, Loverree, woke up with a runny nose last Thursday, her doctor’s office told her it would be a week. ‘I couldn’t wait,’ Ms. Brown said. ‘I had to see what was wrong with my baby. I think she’s got an infection.’ Rather than heading to an emergency room, Ms. Brown took her three children to the Milwaukee Immediate Care Center, a small nonprofit clinic that has treated the north side’s largely African-American community since 1986. The clinic, which keeps hours at night and on weekends, is the only full-time operation in the neighborhood that provides urgent care, luring patients with a sign that reads, ‘When You Need a Doctor Today…'”