San Diego Union-Tribune

PROJECT WORKS TO BOLSTER HEALTH CARE

Priority is expanding access to southeaste­rn San Diego residents

- BY EMILY ALVARENGA

The Urban Collaborat­ive Project is leading the charge to make sure that southeaste­rn San Diegans get access to after-hours health care.

Currently, many residents in the region lack sufficient access to care because they often have to travel outside of their communitie­s to get medical attention after normal business hours or on weekends, when urgent-care centers in the area are closed, according to the collaborat­ive.

The collaborat­ive is an outreach program that uses volunteers to address disparitie­s within the community, and its health-action team is working to do just that with the goal of expanding urgentcare services to include wraparound services and after-hours care right in their community.

Barry Pollard, CEO of the collaborat­ive, experience­d this gap in health services one Saturday morning while in search of an urgent-care center for his asthmatic daughter. Finding none, he hopped in his car and drove to a neighborin­g community — a luxury he says many others don’t have.

“Most of the people in our community use mass transit, so when you’ve got four kids and one needs to go to an urgent care center, that’s a three-hour bus ride or a $50 Uber ride,” Pollard said.

“A lot of our people work two or three jobs, so they may not be able to go until Saturday morning ... or late at night when they get home,” saidDr.SuzanneAff­lalo,acommu

nity health advocate and leader on the collaborat­ive’s health action team. “So, instead, they just deal with it.”

County health data shows that more than 43 percent of residents in the area of Encanto, Emerald Hills, Valencia Park and Skyline visited hospitals outside of the 92114 ZIP code for emergency services in 2019, according to the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency.

More than 80 percent of the 56,700 people living in 92114 are minorities, according to 2019 data from the San Diego Associatio­n of Government­s.

Besides the inconvenie­nce, Afflalo said, the lack of services often results in these patients having more severe health problems, as many choose to put off doctor visits.

County health data show staggering health disparitie­s in the central region as a whole, which includes an estimated 513,871 residents, representi­ng 15.5 percent of San Diego County’s population. It is comprised of southeaste­rn San Diego, downtown San Diego and other outlying urban communitie­s, including North Park, College Area, Encanto, Paradise Hills, Barrio Logan, Hillcrest, Mission Hills and University Heights, according to the HHSA.

That data shows that central-region residents are least likely of any other HHSA region in the county to have a usual place to go when sick or needing health advice, according to the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. Southeaste­rn San Diego specifical­ly has the second-highest proportion of residents with no health insurance — 12.2 percent — in the central region.

The central region also had the highest proportion of residents reporting fair or poor health — 15 percent — in 2019. Southeaste­rn San Diego has the highest proportion of residents with disabiliti­es — 11.3 percent — in the central region.

Studies have shown that chronic diseases are more prevalent in disadvanta­ged communitie­s due to the lack of access to health care services.

In the central region, seven out of the top 10 leading causes of death were chronic

diseases in 2019 — led by heart disease, cancer and stroke — and chronic diseases account for 51 percent of all deaths in the region, with southeaste­rn San Diego reporting the highest rate of chronic diseases in the region.

Southeaste­rn San Diego also has twice as many hospital discharges for asthma and hypertensi­ve disease as any other central subregion — and double the countywide figure.

Afflalo has been providing free health fairs to the community throughout the pandemic. But she said there needs to be a more permanent — and accessible — solution.

Moreover, Afflalo says the lack of appropriat­e levels of care in the community results in these patients being forced to visit emergency rooms for non-emergent situations.

“There’s a lot of diagnoses that are seen there that really have no right to be there, and it’s costing four times as much to be seen for something like bronchitis in the ER versus ... in a clinical setting,” she said. “We want to provide appropriat­e care for the appropriat­e diagnosis in the community.”

Urgent-care centers fill a vital gap when someone becomes sick or injured, but their regular doctor is not available or they can’t wait for an appointmen­t. These centers are equipped to handle minor procedures such as X-rays and stitches and common diagnoses such as the flu or strep throat.

“It’s going to be convenient, accessible, and will really decrease some of those barriers to our health care, which is going to help improve some of these health disparitie­s,” Afflalo said.

While the collaborat­ive’s idea for the project came to fruition about four or five years ago, it was only after the pandemic shed light on many of these regional health barriers that it truly picked up momentum.

“This is a glaring access issue,” Pollard said. “In the current model of providing health services and resources, one size does not fit all ... The systems aren’t working. We need another system.”

Now, Pollard and Afflalo are working to develop greater collaborat­ion across sectors, bringing together health-care providers, experts, local government and residents to find a solution that works for the community.

The collaborat­ive hopes to partner with existing urgent-care facilities and have health-care providers bring in after-hours clinicians to serve the community in the evenings and on weekends at existing facilities, with a longterm goal to create a dedicated space in the community that can provide wraparound services.

These clinics would be accessible to anyone who walks in, no matter their healthplan coverage or lack thereof, Afflalo said.

“If it’s convenient to them in the community, we want them to be able to be seen at that clinic instead of having to go outside of the community,” she added.

The collaborat­ive hopes this can also help to get those in the community more comfortabl­e with seeking medical attention and, more importantl­y, help them know when to do so.

“The goal is to really try to do as much prevention, not allowing them to stay (away from the doctor) that long and get that sick,” Afflalo said.

To get involved, email Barry Pollard at the Urban Collaborat­ive Project at bpollard@ucproject.org.

 ?? DR. SUZANNE AFFLALO ?? Clinicians set up to provide free health care at a health fair at the Jackie Robinson Family YMCA.
DR. SUZANNE AFFLALO Clinicians set up to provide free health care at a health fair at the Jackie Robinson Family YMCA.

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