Callen-Lorde Community Health Center
Callen-Lorde Community Health Center is a primary care center located at 356 West 18th Street in New York, NY. Callen-Lorde also provides comprehensive mental health services at The Thea Spyer Center, located at 230 West 17th Street. Callen-Lorde is dedicated to providing medical health care to the city's LGBTQ population without regard to ability to pay.
The facility offers a variety of services, including dental care, HIV/STD testing and treatment, mental health services, women's health services, transgender hormone therapy, and medical case management support. Callen-Lorde is also home to the Health Outreach to Teens (HOTT) program, which serves youth between the ages of 13 and 22 in an on-premises clinic and a fully equipped medical van.
Callen-Lorde is the only primary care center in New York City created specifically to serve LGBTQ communities.[1] It has been serving these communities since 1983, when it opened its doors as the nation's first community-based HIV clinic under the name of Community Health Project (a merger of St. Mark's Community Clinic and the Gay Men's Health Project).[2] The center has grown both in size and scope since these early days: from a 2,500 square-foot space inside of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center on West 13th Street that primarily worked with HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, into a comprehensive primary care center housed in more than 3 locations, including the 6-floor, 27,000 square-foot 18th Street facility that it moved into in 1997.[3]
In 2007, it was among over 530 New York City arts and social service institutions to receive part of a $30 million grant from the Carnegie Corporation, which was made possible through a donation by New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.[4]
In 2015, during National Health Center Week, Callen-Lorde was one[5] of 266 health centers[6] selected for Affordable Care Act funding as a Federally Qualified Health Center, for providing primary care to a medically underserved population. In a proclamation announcing these awards, President Obama declared, "This week, as we recognize the 50-year anniversary of the first community health centers being established in America, let us remember that health care is not a privilege for the few among us who can afford it, but a right for all Americans -- and let us recognize the vital role health centers across our country play in carrying us toward greater health for our people."[7]
See also
- Michael Callen and Audre Lorde, for whom the organization is named.
References
- ^ "Callen-Lorde Community Health Center website". Retrieved on August 22, 2007
- ^ http://callen-lorde.org/about-us/#ourhistory
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/1997/01/12/realestate/new-home-for-gay-lesbian-health-center.html
- ^ Roberts, Sam (July 6, 2005). "New York Times: City Groups Get Bloomberg Gift of $20 Million". The New York Times. Retrieved April 28, 2010. Retrieved on August 22, 2007
- ^ http://bphc.hrsa.gov/programopportunities/fundingopportunities/NAP/0815awards/ny.html
- ^ http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2015pres/08/20150811a.html
- ^ https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2015/08/07/presidential-proclamation-national-health-center-week-2015