Posted on Wed, Feb. 23, 2005
Pulling the plug on school clinics
BY NICOLE WHITE
nwhite@herald.com
Here inside this pale-pink portable room on the campus of Miami Beach's Fienberg-Fisher Elementary, the everyday pains of being an elementary school student are soothed away.
Nurses dispense medicine for earaches, headaches and the flu, treat those besieged by chickenpox, pinkeye and asthma and marvel at the self-diagnosis of a 6-year-old who tells a nurse practitioner that her stomach pain cannot be from a ruptured appendix. She doesn't have one.
But this and other school-based community health clinics, which serve the children of Miami-Dade and Broward counties' working poor, are in peril of closing. Others have been quietly laying off employees and cutting back services or have already closed.
The clinic at Nautilus Middle School, also in Miami Beach, is set to close at the end of the month, Fienberg-Fisher in June. Six other clinics have closed in Miami-Dade since 2003, including the clinic at R.R Moton Elementary in Homestead run by the University of Miami School of Nursing.
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