By Ricky Cornish
Cronkite News
PHOENIX – More medical services will be available to Native Americans in metro Phoenix, thanks to a $200,000 federal grant awarded to Native American Connections.
The Indian Health Service grant will allow the organization to begin offering primary care services, such as immunizations and wellness checks.
“This grant money will allow us to be able to hire a family nurse practitioner and bring on board a medical case manager, which is something we’ve never had before,” said Alyssa Paone, the director of quality and compliance for
Native American Connections.
Nurse Diana Weaselboy performs a checkup at Patina Wellness Center, part of Native American Connections. Photo by Ricky Cornish / Cronkite News
The nonprofit, founded in 1972, provides substance abuse treatment, behavioral and mental health care and housing assistance to Native Americans in the Phoenix area. It operates 18 sites across central Phoenix, serving thousands of people each year.
Access to health care has long been a challenge for Native Americans living in urban areas. More than half of all American Indians live in metropolitan areas, including
about 90,000 in metro Phoenix, according to federal data.
To help provide health care in urban areas, the Indian Health Service funds 41 nonprofit organizations nationwide, including Native American Connections. Groups in Baltimore and Minneapolis also received funding under the grant.
Native American Connections CEO Diana Yazzie Devine said she looks forward to integrating primary care services with the behavioral health treatment the group already provides.
“This is more about expanding access – easy, simple, access,” she said. “So when people are receiving other services with us, they can receive their medical care at the same time.”
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Note:
This story originally appeared
on Cronkite News and is published via a Creative
Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism
and Mass Communication at Arizona
State University.
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