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New community health clinics bring services to where kids are — inside schools

Riverview Gardens senior Shakira Bent speaks with medical assistant Ebonie Hearn-Tolliver at the makeshift student health clinic at Riverview Gardens High School. The school is renovating a campus building to serve as a full-scale clinic in the future.
Sarah Fentem | St. Louis Public Radio
Riverview Gardens senior Shakira Bent speaks with medical assistant Ebonie Hearn-Tolliver at the makeshift student health clinic at Riverview Gardens High School. The school is renovating a campus building to serve as a full-scale clinic in the future.

Two school districts in north St. Louis County are moving beyond the traditional nurse’s office and putting full-service health clinics in schools.

This week, Hazelwood East High School and Riverview Gardens High School unveiled clinics that will offer primary care as well as dental and behavioral health services for students. Officials at the two schools say bringing doctors to the students – instead of the other way around – is an important step to increasing access on those who need it most

The Christian Hospital Foundation is paying for the first two years of the project.

“What better way to have that access than to go where people are?” said Rick Stevens, president of the foundation and Christian Hospital, which is across the street from Hazelwood East.

The foundation began looking at school-based health centers as a public health tool after researchers from Washington University and St. Louis University published the massive For the Sake of All report in 2014. The report outlined health disparities between residents in St. Louis’ predominantly black areas in the north and predominantly white areas to the south.

For the Sake of All also drew a connection between poor health and dropout numbers. Chronic childhood illnesses such as asthma and untreated mental health issues can  lead a student to struggle in school and eventually drop out, which in turn can lead to other risky health behaviors and poor health outcomes, according to the report.

“If you’re sick you’re not coming to school, if you have this chronic illness you deal with a shortness of breath you don’t have a normal lifestyle like the other kids,” Stevens said. “There might be some things you might want to participate in, like sports, but it’s holding you back. What we want to give people opportunity that doesn’t hold them back.”

The two clinics will serve more than 2,500 students across the Hazelwood and Riverview Gardens school districts. Physicians and nurse practitioners from the community health center CareSTL Health will staff the clinics (doctors will be on site certain days of the week.)

The clinics will function much like traditional community health centers, offering across-the-board services to students regardless of their insurance or financial status.

The pediatricians and nurse practitioners will, for example, give immunizations, give children physicals, or treat asthma, said Regina Askew, behavioral health director for CareSTL.

“We have licensed clinical behavioral health consultants that are trained in diagnosing mental health disorders and also providing counseling right on staff,” she said, adding many students in the system may be dealing with undiagnosed trauma and homelessness.

School officials say they may expand the program to include sexual health screenings and education and hope to someday offer care to family and faculty as well as students.

The neighborhoods where the two clinics are opening have some of the highest rates of poverty and uninsured rates in the St. Louis area. North St. Louis and north St. Louis County also have some of the lowest health outcomes, such as high rates of cancer and heart disease, according to the Missouri Information for Community Assessment database.

Such factors put together can mean students and their parents have a hard time making it to the doctor, Askew said.

“If they take off work they don’t get paid, because they don’t have the vacation time,” Askew said. “If they take off work to take their child to their doctor, then that’s some more funds they don’t have available for their household.”

Meeting students where they already are – at school – removes that burden, Askew said.

Follow Sarah on Twitter: @petit_smudge

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Sarah Fentem reports on sickness and health as part of St. Louis Public Radio’s news team. She previously spent five years reporting for different NPR stations in Indiana, immersing herself deep, deep into an insurance policy beat from which she may never fully recover. A longitme NPR listener, she grew up hearing WQUB in Quincy, Illinois, which is now owned by STLPR. She lives in the Kingshighway Hills neighborhood, and in her spare time likes to watch old sitcoms, meticulously clean and organize her home and go on outdoor adventures with her fiancé Elliot. She has a cat, Lil Rock, and a dog, Ginger.