New York Daily News

McGuire’s plan to bring ‘Doctors to the People’

- Shant Shahrigian

The city would set up two mobile doctors’ clinics in each borough to tackle the dire health care inequities exposed by the COVID pandemic, according to a plan proposed by mayoral candidate Ray McGuire.

The roaming medical buses could visit as many as 60 locations per borough every month under the plan to provide routine checkups and other services by NYC Health + Hospitals profession­als in underserve­d communitie­s, McGuire’s policy adviser, Anthony Hogrebe, told the Daily News on Sunday.

The “Doctors to the People” fleet would focus on communitie­s with the least health care coverage, starting with NYCHA buildings, and enroll people without insurance in the city’s “NYC Care” program that connects low-income people with primary care, Hogrebe told the News.

“There are likely to be long-term health impacts of the pandemic, and we have just started to scratch the surface of what those look like,” Hogrebe said. “The only way you’re going to manage that kind of public health challenge is getting New Yorkers actually connected to ongoing health care.”

Buying and outfitting the fleet of buses would cost about $10 million, he said. As with other parts of his platform, McGuire, a former vice chairman of Citigroup, would look to the private sector for support on public health.

With more than 8% of New Yorkers under age 65 lacking health insurance, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, McGuire wants to work with Albany to boost enrollment in the state’s “Essential Plan” offering medical coverage for $20 per month.

He would grant access to anyone who has had COVID-19 and raise the income cutoff for eligibilit­y.

He also promised to partner with private health care providers on apprentice­ships that would move more doctors into minority communitie­s.

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