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Campus Health Care Keeps Kids In School

Theresa Civil is a student at Evans Community School and patient at the on-campus Wellness Cottage.
Abe Aboraya
/
Health News Florida
Theresa Civil is a student at Evans Community School and patient at the on-campus Wellness Cottage.

Theresa Civil is a high school junior and a wrestler.

The Orlando teen has a big smile and a big laugh, and she’s got big plans for after high school: She wants to be a homicide detective, get her Ph.D. and become an Army engineer.

She frets about her health. Any little thing wrong, she goes to the doctor.

Theresa Civil is a student at Evans Community School and patient at the on-campus Wellness Cottage.
Credit Abe Aboraya / Health News Florida
/
Health News Florida
Theresa Civil is a student at Evans Community School and patient at the on-campus Wellness Cottage.

That used to mean making an appointment and waiting weeks for an opening. Now, Civil sees the doctor in the halls, and the next morning, she’s being seen at Evans Wellness Cottage.

She calls it a second home.

"I can just get up and say, ‘Hey, I need a doctor’s appointment.’ It allows me to be independent and it's convenient for my mom as well, she doesn’t have to take time off, and bring me to a doctor, or schedule an appointment two months later, (where) I might end up dying" in the meantime, she laughs.

The Wellness Cottage sits behind Evans Community School in a small modular building. It was built with half a million dollars of grant money, and has seen more than 1,000 patients since opening in December.

  It’s a partnership between the University of Central Florida, the nonprofit Children’s Home Society and the clinic operators, True Health.

Orange County Schools Superintendent Barbara Jenkins said the Wellness Cottage at the high school takes direct aim at a big problem: It’s hard to focus on school if you or a family member is sick.

“And so while we may have fragile families and fragile students, if we bundle around them, if we proved the wraparound services, if we keep them from worrying about adult issues that no child should have to worry about, we know they won’t break," Jenkins said. "They’ll be strong.”

The Wellness Cottage manages chronic diseases like asthma, diabetes and high blood pressure, said

 Tasha Casaccio is spokeswoman for True Health, the company that operates the Evans Wellness Cottage in Orlando.
Credit Abe Aboraya / Health News Florida
/
Health News Florida
Tasha Casaccio is spokeswoman for True Health, the company that operates the Evans Wellness Cottage in Orlando.

   Students can get physicals, lab work and prescriptions. They have space to bring in behavioral health counselors. And they even have a dental clinic.

“We have a dentist and two dental techs here," Casaccio said. "We do cleanings, oral cancer screenings, X-rays exams extractions and fillings.”

Evans is in a low-income neighborhood of Pine Hills, just five miles east of Downtown Orlando. There are nowhere near enough primary care doctors and dentists to serve the area’s 60,000 mostly African American residents. That shortage is behind the federal Health Resources and Services Administration’s decision to award a grant to build the Wellness Cottage.

The clinic, however, isn’t just open for students. Sometimes when a student is sick, the family will come in as well. But it’s open as well for residents in the area, offering all the same services as a free clinic.

In fact, asking adult patients who have some ability to pay is how the Wellness Cottage is able to cover the estimated $800,000 a year in operational costs.

The Wellness Cottage model has caught the attention of several Florida school districts, including Pasco County, just north of Tampa.  

Plans already are underway to duplicate the cottage in other parts of Florida. So far, there are three grants, including one in Pasco County just north of Tampa. It’s one of the three districts awarded a grant to pursue a wellness cottage, said Ray Gadd, who oversees the grant for the Pasco County School Board.

“The number of problems and issues teachers deal with are significant and it is very difficult for teachers to be all things to all people," Gadd said. "The idea behind a community school is essentially the community wraps the school in support services.”

Those services are one reason Theresa Civil says she will be graduating from Evans Community School next year. She hopes other kids like her will be able to see a doctor when they’re sick.

"They’re used to (hearing), ‘You’ll be OK, suck it up.’ It’s hard to focus on getting my work done and continuing coming to school when I’m physically and emotionally not stable,” Civil said. “So with the doctor here, not that far from your school, they’re taking a weight off your shoulder.”

WUSF reporter Daylina Miller contributed to this story. Abe Aboraya is a reporter with WMFE in Orlando. WMFE is a partner with Health News Florida, which receives support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Copyright 2015 WUSF Public Media - WUSF 89.7

Health News Florida reporter Abe Aboraya works for WMFE in Orlando. He started writing for newspapers in high school. After graduating from the University of Central Florida in 2007, he spent a year traveling and working as a freelance reporter for the Seattle Times and the Seattle Weekly, and working for local news websites in the San Francisco Bay area. Most recently Abe worked as a reporter for the Orlando Business Journal. He comes from a family of health care workers.
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