Windsor Star

Amherstbur­g to welcome new clinic in old school

‘Shovels will be flying’ soon at former St. Bernard’s building, mayor enthuses

- MARY CATON

Renovation­s will begin soon on the shuttered St. Bernard’s elementary school in Amherstbur­g in order to transform part of the building into a new nurse practition­er-led clinic.

The town purchased the school from the Windsor-Essex Catholic District School Board last year with an eye toward making it a community hub. “Shovels will be flying once the constructi­on companies are in place,” said Amherstbur­g Mayor Aldo DiCarlo.

Town council approved the necessary renovation­s Monday on the heels of receiving approval from the Ministry of Health and LongTerm Care for $650,000 in funding for the clinic.

The Essex County Nurse Practition­er-Led Clinic (ECNPLC) will expand its services into Amherstbur­g under a 10-year agreement. The group presently has clinics in Essex and Windsor. Pauline Gemmell, ECNPLC’s executive director, wrote a business case for an Amherstbur­g location last summer.

“We had been told there was a need in the community,” Gemmell said. “Now that we’ve got the expansion funding, we’re very excited.”

Gemmell said the Amherstbur­g clinic will have three full-time nurse practition­ers, one fulltime registered practical nurse, one half-time social worker, one half-time registered dietitian, one half-time health promoter and physiother­apy services.

She said each nurse practition­er takes care of approximat­ely 800 patients, meaning the clinic could serve 2,400 patients.

“We have all kinds of (patient) applicatio­ns already,” she said. “We are anticipati­ng we’ll probably be full pretty quickly.” The ECNPLC’s website explains its clinic model “is designed to improve access to care for the thousands of individual­s and families who do not currently have a primary health-care provider.” A nurse practition­er can assess, diagnose and treat a wide range of health issues in consultati­on with physicians and other health-care profession­als.

“We do a lot of education in our clinics,” Gemmell said. Gemmell said the Amherstbur­g clinic will require approximat­ely 4,000 square feet of space within the defunct school’s 30,000-square-foot imprint. The goal is to have the clinic up and running by spring or early summer.

DiCarlo said discussion­s continue with other possible tenants, including “at least one more big client” he hopes to announce in the near future.

He’d like the hub to offer a mix of services “that generally spreads across the generation­s. I don’t like the old idea of putting seniors in the corner. I like the idea of mixing young and old. We’d like to see some shared use agreements.”

 ?? NICK BRANCACCIO ?? The former St. Bernard School on Richmond Street in Amherstbur­g is to become a new medical clinic led by nurse practition­ers.
NICK BRANCACCIO The former St. Bernard School on Richmond Street in Amherstbur­g is to become a new medical clinic led by nurse practition­ers.

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