Nine months after the Camp Fire damaged or destroyed most of the medical facilities serving residents in and near the town of Paradise, including the Feather River Hospital, survivors of the fire have few options for health care.
Direct Relief is helping a group of former Feather River Hospital workers and other healthcare workers establish a free mobile clinic for serving area residents. The health workers, who have been providing care as volunteers since the second day of the Camp Fire, have formed the nonprofit Medspire Health to bring healthcare services to Magalia and surrounding areas. In addition to hosting on-site clinics, they’re looking to acquire and equip a mobile clinic to expand their services.
In the interim as the grant is being evaluated, Direct Relief provided a $50,000 grant to equip the group for providing free clinic days at temporary facilities.
The fire evacuees that Medspire’s volunteer doctors and nurses serve were deeply challenged even before the fire. Among 240 patients served at a pop-up disaster clinic shortly after the fire, all identified as low income, 60% suffered chronic illness, 35% were diagnosed with a mental health condition, over 30% were uninsured and 40% noted that they were without regular medical care, Medspire reported in its grant application. “These were people who started with very little, whose lives were something of a carefully constructed house of cards, and now had nothing,” Medspire said.
The Medspire funding is a small piece of the extensive aid Direct Relief has provided to help fire victims and prepare local communities for the next big fire, detailed here.