Taking By JONATHAN EPSTEIN i UNLESS additional funding is found, the Free People's Clinic of Ann Arbor will be forced to shut down by the end of the year. Located on 225 East Liberty Street, the Clinic is open three evenings a week and currently provides primary health care to about forty patients weekly. In addition, the Clinic sponsors Children Health Fairs in which free physical examinations, im- munizations, and hearing tests are given, and participates with several other Ann Arbor area health care facilities in Project Unicorn, a program designed to meet the financial needs of the elderly in those areas not, cov- ered by private medical insur- ance or government aid pro- grams. When compared to other low- FREE PEOPLES CLINIC the pinch out of health care cost health clinics in Ann Ar- bor, the patient load of the Free People's Clinic is not large; in a week, the University Hospital Adult Walk-In Clinic absorbs ap- proximately 320 patients, while the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Walk-In takes in 150. Two low- cost health care clinics admin- istered by the non-profit Sum- mit Medical Center, Inc., re- ceive over 600 patient visits weekly. The Free People's Clinic is likely to be the only Possible source of health care for those who use its facilities. The aver- age fee collected from F r e e People's Clinic patients is less than one dollar. In contrast, the walk-in clinics of the two hos- pitals usually charge about ten dollars per patient visit, while the average fee charged by the Summit Medical Center Clinics THE FREE PEOPLES Clinic . . . the only affordable source of health care for those who use its facilities. Its average fee: Less than a dollar. "There is need for ex- pansion of the Free People's Clinic; due, to the limited operating hours, the Clinic is cur-_ rently forced to t u r n away as many patients as it serves." is between seven and e i g h t dollars. A FPC survey indicates that over half of its )arients earn less than $3,000 annually, an income level which p-obably precludes the use of other health care clinics in Ann Arbor. THE CLIENTELE of the Free People's Clinic is mainly com- posed of self-supporting young people. During hte initial estab- lishment of the clinic, transient youths formed a significant part of the Clinic's patient load, but presently an overwhelming ma- jority of clinic patients are per- manent residents of the A n n Arbor community who use the FPC on a regular basis. The clinic provides extensive health care counseling in addi- tion to medical treatment. Be- fore seeing a member of the FPC's volunteer staff of physic- ians, each patient is given the opportunity to discuss health concerns with an FPC patient advocate. Patients of the clinic contend that the FPC's counsel- ing services humanize health care whereas most medical fa- cilities in Ann Arbor are thought to be cold, impersonal intitu- tions. In essence, it seems that large numbers of FPC patients prefer the treatment offered at the clinic to that of other health care facilities, and many of them could not afford to u s e other facilities on a long term basis. Mrs. Janet Klaver, a member of the board of direcors of Summit Medical Center, Inc., feels the Free Peo,,e's Clinic furnishes "an essential sntice" to the Ann Arbor com-nimity BUT, BECAUSE of the Cyn- ic's desire to avoid prohibitive patient charges, the FPC faces financial difficulties. The clin- ic has asked the city of Ann Arbor for $117,355 in Federal revenue sharing funds. Over half the sum was requested to expand the operations of t h e Clinic. The Free People's Clin- ic also wants funds to hire a full- time physician, increase the number of paid admisistrative staff, and finance downpayment costs for a permaneaI facility. The offices of the Free Peo- ple's Clinic are presettly on the second floor of a building lack- ing an elevator. Kevin Conway, one of the six administrative co- ordinators of the Clinie, points out that the ofices are b o t h cramped and inaccessible to eld- erly patients.mA new Ifcility with a full-time do.ctor would permit an expansion of Clioic services to serve over I5' itr- sons a week. Such an expansion is neces- sary, according to toe FPC re- quest for revenue shar'.gi mon- ies because, "with he reloca- tion of St. Joseph Mercy Hospi- tal to Superior Township, need for low-cost health care wIll "The Free People's Clinic is likely to be the only possible source of health care for those who use its facilities. The average fee collected from Free People's Clinic'patients is less than one dollar." rise considerably in our city." the Citizens' Committee on Com- IT SHOULD be noted, how- munity' Development Revenue ever, that St. Joseph M e r c y Sharing, a group appHinted by Hospital will not be moving un- Mayor Al Wheeler to establish a til the summer of 1977, and the tentative allocation of Federal hospital has indicated it may revenue sharing funds. leave its walk-in clinic in Ann Spencer Maidlow, an assistant Arbor. St. Joseph will net make administrator of St. J o s e p h a final decision concnrning t h e Mercy Hospital, declares, "the eventual location of its walk-in Free People's Clinic is adding facilities until an ou'side con- beneficially to the health care sultant's study on ambulatory resources of Ann Arbor." If the health care services in the Ann city of Ann Arbor does refuse Arbor area, sponsored by 'ise to fund the Clinic, it will be local hospitals, is completed. denying adequate healh care to But even if the walk in clinic a portion of its population. of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital re- Jonathan Epstein is a jun- mains in Ann Arbor, there a s ir economics major. need for expansion of the Free People's Clinic; due to limited operating hours, the Clinic is currently forced to turn awaya as many patients as it serves. One might still question the desirability o Clinic expansion STIGTERCR for the sake ofaccomodating SETTING THE RECOR elderly patients; eldery people STRAIGHT may not feel comfortable with An error was made in Wednes- the younger patients of the 1,in- day's guest editorial describing ic. Dr. Bob Soderstrom, a resi- Mary Nash as a member of the dent physician at Univeruity "People's Bicentennal Commit- hospital and a member of t h e tee". She is actually a member FPC's volunteer medical staff, of the planning committee for stated that "it might be impos- the Chicago People's Bicenten- sible to merge the two clien- nial Festival to be held June 29. tele." The Festival will mark the cul- Another member of the Clin- mination of the 21st Convention ic's physician staff suggested of the Communist Party, U.S.A. that the Free People's Clinic The planning committee and the could establish separate sessions festival have no connection with for the elderly in much the the Peoples Bicentennial Com- same manner that they present- mission. ly reserve Wednesday nights for gynecology cases. DR. SODERSTROM did feel that a salaried physician would be of great benefit to lie clinic; a full time doctor would permit the regular patients of the Free People's Clinic to be seen by the same physician an succeed- ing visits. In addition, the uncer- tainty created by the recent in- crease in malpractice litigation has had a negative effect on the Clinic's ability to maintain a stable volunteer doctor staff. An administrative cordinator of the clinic believes, "the Free People's Clinic will not be able to sustain its present level of services without the assistance of a salaried physician." The future level of FPC servi ces rests to a large degree with The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, June 24, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 The President#: Different face, same old sonhg By PAUL HASKINS HAD A WAYWARD American couple dropped out of circulation at some point three or four years ago, and spent the ensuing seasons puttering around the Aleutians in search of the great frozen treas- are, only to return this week, they would have found this country in pretty much the same fix it was in in 1971. And the discovery wouldn't have phased them in the least. Why .should it have? Before their departure for the boonies, the Nixon Doctrine had already been shaved and honed to a keen edge, social programs had been demoted to. yesterday's fashion, big business was gearing up for its Mideast extravaganza and lesser domestic sideshows and the national leadership was over- powering those opposition elements it couldn't keep down through sheer intimidation, The present-day derivatives of those somewhat imposing trends are the results of a fairly strange political evolution that was triggered at some point soon after the transient twosome's departure -- an evolution the likes of which had never been wit- nesed before and whose inpect and extent are still being debated by those who debate such things. What we're finding out now is that the strongest feature of the multiple explosion that was Water- gate, Spiro, ITT, et al left us with a political ter- rain virtually identical to the one Richard Nix n plotted before his demise. Somehow all the poli- tical traditions, perceptions and power channels pre- sumedly blown skyhigh and forever altered by Water- gate have reassembled and settled into the exact same patterns they always occupied. THE WAYWARD Americans that returned this week would feel right at home in the country they left four years ago, because, in fact, it is the same country, run by the same indomitable unseen powers, motivated by the same production ethic, and blind to the same challenuges to survival it has always been curiously incapable of perceiving. The wayward Americans would see a different man in the White House. Instead of a ski-slope nose, they would see a skull of granite. But only superficial changes. Maybe radical plastic surgery undergone in hopes of improving his public image. He always was an image man. But the words would be unmistakeably the same. The intonations identi- cal, and the eyes . . . certainly the eyes, looking at you, but really right around you. GERALD FORD is a lie. A grand deception, a lousy joke. Maybe not in and of himself. He might even mean well, for what that's worth. It might make a good epitaph or something. But in the con- text of what this country has gone through in the past four years, of the shakes, both up and down, Gerald Ford stands as an obstruction in the national plumbing. We thought we were getting Drano, but what we got stuck with was just another clog. Goodby, reform-hello, stripmining. Paul Haskins is The Daily Editorial Director.