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New Pharmacy Curbside Pick Up Hours in Hyannis!

Curbside service only available this summer when the health center is closed

The pharmacy at Harbor Community Health Center – Hyannis has new curbside pick up hours this summer 2021!

Beginning July 6, please come inside the health center to visit the pharmacy when the health center is open.

Health Center Hours

Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM
Tuesday and Thursday, 8:00 AM -8:30 PM
Saturday, 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM

When the health center is closed, our pharmacy will offer curbside pick up.

Pharmacy Curbside Pick Up Hours

Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 4:30 PM – 8:00 PM
Saturday, 12:00 PM – 4:00 PM
Sunday, 8:00 AM – 1:00 PM

Please call the pharmacy at (508) 778-5424 for curbside pick-up during these times.

PLEASE NOTE: Curbside pick up will only be available when the health center is closed!

You can download an informational flyer with our curbside hours and phone number by clicking the buttons below.

We thank you for your patience as we make this change!

Harbor Health Launches the THRIVE Clinic

Free, confidential, and inclusive HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health services

Harbor Health will open the THRIVE clinic this June with three upcoming clinics, open to the community.

The THRIVE clinic will offer HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health services. Services are free of charge and confidential. 

Service include:

  • HIV rapid testing and counseling – finger stick or oral swab, results in 20 minutes or less
  • PrEP education and connection to care
  • Sexual health education
  • Family planning education
  • Safer sex and menstruation supplies

The June THRIVE clinics will take place at Harbor Health’s Dorchester community health centers and at the Plymouth Pride Festival  in Plymouth.

Thrive Clinic Hours

Reservations for testing and counseling appointments are recommended at our health center clinics. Walk-ins are also welcome.

Clinics will take place every month at our health centers and pop-up locations at community events.

We also work with community organizations to provide services to their clients. If you would like to learn more about having a THRIVE clinic come to your organization, please call (617) 533-2228.

How Can We Help You?

To stay healthy, you need to take care of all of you! And the THRIVE clinic is there to help.

THRIVE stands for:

T – Trusted services

H– HIV testing and prevention

R– Reproductive and sexual health

I– Inclusive

V– Vital

E– Educational

The THRIVE clinic’s mission is to help everyone feel welcome, comfortable, safe, and supported in asking for HIV prevention and sexual and reproductive health information, services, and supplies. 

Our kind and caring prevention services team works at the THRIVE clinic.  They are trained in HIV testing, counseling, and answering all kinds of questions about sexual and reproductive health.

The team can:

  • Help you with what to say and questions to ask your medical provider about PrEP.
  • Give you information about different birth control methods.
  • Assist you in understanding your risk for HIV and how often you should get tested.
  • Connect you to care and resources to help you pay for PrEP.
  • Answer questions about STIs and connect you to testing and treatment.

We hope to see you at an upcoming clinic! Learn more about the THRIVE clinic

 

Responding to Anti-Asian Violence

Massachusetts Town Hall on Anti-Asian Racism on Thursday, March 25

The rise in anti-Asian violence during the pandemic has directly impacted our friends, neighbors, patients, and colleagues. At Harbor Health, we are deeply troubled when people in our community struggle to stay healthy and feel safe because of racism.

We wanted to share an important statement championed by the Asian Pacific Islanders Civic Action Network (APIs CAN).  Harbor Health joined elected officials and local organizations in signing this statement.

APIs CAN along with local organizations will also host the Massachusetts Town Hall on Anti-Asian Racism on Thursday, March 25 at 6 pm.  You can download flyers for more information below.

Statement from the Asian Pacific Islanders Civic Action Network…

Community Organizations Respond to Anti-Asian Violence and Targeted Murders in Atlanta

APIs CAN and our member organizations and allies are enraged and devastated by the targeted murders of 8 people, most of whom were Asian American women, in Atlanta.

Increased and unchecked anti-Asian rhetoric during the COVID-19 pandemic has fueled xenophobia and anti-Asian racism. We have seen a rise in attacks on Asian Americans, particularly elderly people, across the country, and a lack of safety in all aspects of our community members’ lives.

From the Chinese Exclusion Act to Japanese Internment to the Sikh temple shooting in Oak Creek to the disproportionate impact on Southeast Asians in the school to prison to deportation pipeline, racism against Asians is ingrained in this country’s history. Women and femmes experience the brunt of not only this racism, but also the sexist stereotypes of Asian American women, which leads to many types of violence, including what we saw in Georgia yesterday.

Asian American women are on the frontlines of our economic sectors, including as domestic workers and nail salon workers. Asian American women are also the center of our family lives as homemakers and caretakers. Asian American women live simultaneously at the margins of society and at the intersection of immigration, gender, race, and class.

We denounce violence against Asian American communities in all forms, and we call on local, state, and federal governments to:

  • Support robust and responsive crisis intervention resources, including in-language support for mental health, legal, employment, and immigration services;
  • Center transformative justice that begins with cross racial dialogue and community-building that address white supremacy as the root cause of violence and hate;
  • Fund non-law enforcement strategies that invest in communities of color to address long-term systemic racism and extreme inequality — jobs, housing, immigration, healthcare, and To end violence, we must ensure our people have the resources and opportunities they need to lead dignified lives; and
  • Focus on survivors’ needs to ensure victims and survivors of all backgrounds and language abilities receive full supportive multilingual and culturally appropriate services so they can recover and

APIsCAN is hosting a forum March 25, 2021 6pm-7:30pm highlighting how the Asian American community in MA is organizing against racism and learning how to support our community during the pandemic. RSVP at bit.ly/townhallaar.

Download the Town Hall flyer – English

Download the Town Hall flyer – Vietnamese

 

 

 

 

We Are Live!

Harbor Health has a new health record system

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Harbor Health has a new health record system. Your health record is where we store your health information.

Your privacy important to us!  We will keep all of your health information private under HIPPA guidelines.

You should know…

  • Some parts of your appointment may go a little slower while we learn the new system.
  • Some of the documents you receive from your care team may look different.
  • You will need to sign up for our NEW PATIENT PORTAL MyChart.

Sign Up For MyChart!

MyChart is a safe, easy, and free! You can check lab results, send messages to your care team, request refills, and more – anytime, anywhere!

You will need to sign up for a MyChart account.  Even if you had an account on Harbor Health’s old patient portal, you will still need to sign up for MyChart.

Your care team will also be able to answer questions about signing up for MyChart.  You can also learn more by visiting hhsi.us/patient-information/patient-portal.

Thank you for your patience!

Please know we will do everything we can to make this change as easy as possible for our staff and patients.  We appreciate your patience as we learn the new system.

Our New Health Record System Is Coming 3.9.21!

COMING SOON! 5 things you should know about our new system

On Tuesday, March 9, 2021, Harbor Health will have new health record system. Your health record is where your care team tracks and stores your health information.

There are 5 THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW about our new system.

5 Things You Should Know About Harbor’s New Health Record System

  1. All of your information will be kept private under HIPAA guidelines. Your privacy is very important to us.
  2. Some of the documents you receive from your care team may look different. Instructions, forms, and other documents we give or send to you before or after your appointment may look different.
  3. We will have a NEW PATIENT PORTAL called MyChart. Our patient portal is a safe, easy, and free way  to see lab results, upcoming appointments, medications, and more.
  4. You will need to download the MyChart patient app and register. Even if you have a patient portal account right now, you will need to register for a MyChart account.  The patient app is free and will be available on the Google Play and Apple stores.
  5. We will also use MyChart Zoom for video/phone appointments. We will share information about having a MyChart Zoom on our telehealth information page on this website.

We will give you registration information for MyChart soon. We will share information at your next appointment and on our patient portal page on this website.

THANK YOU for your patience while we make this change! 

It’s A Virtual Community Baby Shower

FREE EVENT Hosted By Harbor Health and Dorchester South/South Boston WIC

Harbor Health and Dorchester South/South Boston WIC will host a virtual community baby shower! The baby shower will take place on  Wednesday, January 27, 2021, 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm.

This free event is open to all new and expecting parents.

Harbor Health’s family medicine, pediatrics, women’s health/OB-GYN, and WIC teams will be there! They will provide helpful information and resources.  They can answer questions you may have about labor and delivery, feeding, infant care, and more.

Registration for our virtual community baby shower is required!

Call Anna Pham at (617) 680-3217 to sign up.  She will send you the Zoom meeting invitation after you register.

We hope to see you there!

 

Honoring Dr. Jack Geiger, A Man With A Mission

A message from Chuck Jones, President & CEO of Harbor Health

All of us at Harbor Health were deeply saddened to learn about the recent death of Dr. Jack Geiger.  He was a monumental figure in our own organization’s history, as well as in the worlds of medicine and social justice.

In December 1965, Dr. Geiger co-founded the Columbia Point Health Center, now Harbor’s Geiger Gibson Community Health Center in Dorchester.  His passionate activism and determination to uproot the societal injustices which caused poverty and poor health were the seeds of the community health center movement nationally.

As Dr. Geiger told Time Magazine at the time, “We have known for a long time about the relationships between poverty and health without fully facing up to them.  The poor are likelier to be sick.  The sick are likelier to be poor.  Without intervention, the poor get sicker and the sick get poorer.”

He believed community health centers were not the end, they were the means to a “road out” of poverty. Today health centers like Geiger Gibson serve nearly 30 million low income patients each year across the U.S., each of them firmly anchored in the values and approach to community health that Dr. Geiger instilled over 55 years ago.

Dr. Geiger’s life and accomplishments are well documented, so we won’t attempt to recount them all here.  Perhaps his legacy can best be honored by remembering that, yes, while he was a doctor, our co-founder, a founding member of two antiwar Nobel Peace Prize winning organizations, and an iconic figure in public health, he was also someone who simply believed we should look out for people in trouble.

For him, building and sustaining a healthy community was not only about providing exceptional healthcare, but also about fostering mutual respect and compassion, and sharing knowledge and resources so that everyone had a chance to reach their full potential.

Racial and social justice were and are inseparable from community health.

After watching the health and economic effects of the pandemic disproportionately fall across the country this year, we will continue to be inspired by this same belief.

Chuck Jones
President & CEO

Holiday Hours At Harbor’s Community Health Centers

Remember to celebrate safely this holiday season to stop the spread of Covid-19!

Please check our hours during the winter holidays.

Holiday Hours

CHRISTMAS EVE: All centers closed at 3 pm
CHRISTMAS DAY: All centers closed
NEW YEAR’S EVE: All centers closed at 5:00 pm
NEW YEAR’S DAY:
Harbor Community Health Center-Hyannis: 8:00 am -12:00 pm
Geiger Gibson Community Health Center: 8:30 am – 12:30 pm
Daniel Driscoll-Neponset Health Center: 8:30 am – 12:30 pm
Harbor Community Health Center-Plymouth: Closed
Ellen Jones Community Dental Center: Closed

The Food Pantry at Daniel Driscoll – Neponset Health Center will also be closed on December 29. Please visit HHSI.US/FoodPantry for information about other local food resources.

COVID-19 Never Misses A Party

Protect yourself, your family, and your community this holiday season!  Follow COVID-19 safety guidelines including wearing a mask and washing hands frequently.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health is also asking everyone to:

You can download more tips for staying healthy and safe during the winter holidays by clicking on the links below:

English: mass.gov/doc/stop-covid-19-holiday-gatherings-reminders/download

Español: mass.gov/doc/stop-covid-19-holiday-gatherings-reminders-es/download

Tiếng Việt: mass.gov/doc/stop-covid-19-holiday-gatherings-reminders-vn/download

Português:  mass.gov/doc/stop-covid-19-holiday-dinners-portuguese/download

Kreyòl Ayisyen: mass.gov/doc/stop-covid-19-holiday-gatherings-reminders-ht/download

From everyone at Harbor Health, we wish you a healthy and safe holiday!

Harbor’s Elder Service Plan Participants Get Urgent Care at Home

ESP care team working together with instED paramedics to deliver in-home care

We are excited to share that Harbor’s Elder Service Plan (ESP) is now partnering with instED paramedics to give our ESP participants urgent care at home!

“When COVID surged in Massachusetts last spring, we quickly moved to provide as many healthcare services as we could in our participants homes,”  explained ESP’s Senior Vice President Gretchen Reynard.

“As we worked to keep the elders in our program healthy and safe during the pandemic, we knew we needed to avoid unnecessary emergency room visits, which is why we decided to partner with instED.”

Paramedics are medical professionals with training in emergency care.  They can do tests and treatments normally done in the emergency room.

They can test for COVID-19, flu, and strep, evaluate heart functioning, and administer IV fluids and antibiotics…all  right in a participant’s home.

According to Gretchen, “many participants and caregivers think they need to go to the emergency room when they need care after hours or on weekends. Now we can bring urgent care to them.”  With paramedics available until midnight every night, ESP participants now have more access to urgent tests, medicines, and treatments 365 days a year.

To help you learn more about the in-home urgent care now offered by ESP, we have answers to many of your frequently asked questions below.

Read on to learn more!

How Does ESP’s In-Home Urgent Care Work?

Paramedics can go to a participant’s home until midnight 7 days a week. They can provide many of the same things as emergency rooms for diarrhea, vomiting, pain, confusion, or when you aren’t sure you can wait to feel better.

Mattapan participants: Call 617-533-2400.

Brockton participants: Call 774-470-6700.

A participant who isn’t feeling well can call ESP for help with urgent care.

What types of  care can instED paramedics provide?

Harbor’s ESP partners with instED paramedics who are trained in giving emergency care at home. These paramedics work with your ESP care team to perform tests and treatments to help you feel better without needing to go to the emergency room.

Tests include:

  • Medical checkup to evaluate your health, breathing, heart function, temperature
  • Heart monitoring
  • Bloodwork and testing for urinary tract infections, flu, strep, and COVID

Based on test results and talking with your ESP team, paramedics can give:

  • Breathing treatments
  • Medicines to treat infections, pain, nausea, and more
  • Fluids or other treatments through an IV
  • And more

What should I do when I think I need urgent care at home?

CALL ESP! When you call, your team will assess your needs and will send a paramedic as needed.

Mattapan participants: call 617-533-2400

Brockton participants: call 774-470-6700

How quickly can a paramedic come to my home?

After you call ESP, paramedics will arrive between 2 to 4 hours.

When should I call 9-1-1 before calling ESP?

You should call 9-1-1 if you ever think your health is in serious danger or you:

  • Fall and break a bone.
  • Have sudden numbness or weakness in the face, arm, or leg.
  • Suddenly have severe chest pain or shortness of breath.
  • Have a sudden headache with vision changes or fainting.
  • Pass out or faint.
  • Have a lot of bleeding that won’t stop.
  • Suddenly have a lot of abdominal pain with bloody stool.

Have More Questions About In-Home Urgent Care?

Contact your care team by calling 617-533-2400 (Mattapan) or 774-470-6700 (Brockton).

New to ESP? Harbor’s ESP is a Massachusetts Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly.  Learn more about our program at elderserviceplan.org.

Food Assistance in a SNAP – Get Help With Your Application!

Get Help With Your SNAP Application At Harbor Community Health Centers

What you eat is very important to your overall health.  Eating a variety of nutritious foods every day can help you to reach and maintain a healthy weight and reduce your risk of chronic diseases like tooth decay, heart disease, and diabetes.

To make sure everyone in our community can get enough healthy, nutritious food for themselves and all the members of their family, Harbor Health and the Department of Transitional Assistance (DTA) are working together to help you with Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program/SNAP needs at our the health centers!

Having Trouble Paying For Food?

Our community health workers can help anyone in the community who is having trouble paying for food apply for SNAP. You do not have to be a Harbor Health patient to make an appointment for help with your SNAP application.

We can help you:

  • Learn more about the SNAP program
  • Find out if you qualify for assistance
  • Complete SNAP applications
  • Gather information or documents for verifications
  • Understand the application process
  • Complete the recertification process to remain eligible for SNAP

You do not have to go to the DTA to complete your SNAP application – our community health workers can help you complete an application over the phone.

Interpreters are available to help with the appointment.

What Is SNAP?

SNAP stands for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. SNAP provides a monthly benefit to buy nutritious foods.

To get SNAP, you must be low-income and be a U.S. citizen or a legal non-citizen (restrictions apply). Eligibility for SNAP benefits depends on financial and non-financial criteria.

If you have MassHealth, you may qualify for SNAP!  Contact our community health workers to see if you are eligible!

What Can You Buy With SNAP?

You can use SNAP to buy food for the household, such as:

  • Raw or uncooked meat, poultry, and fish
  • Dairy products, breads, and cereals
  • Fruits and vegetables

All SNAP households are automatically enrolled in the Healthy Incentives Program (HIP)! You can use SNAP to buy fruits and vegetables from a HIP authorized farm or vendor and receive $1 for each dollar you spend, up to a monthly limit.

Ready To Make An Appointment?

Call our community health worker at one of the following Harbor health centers to make an appointment.

Geiger Gibson Community Health Center, 250 Mount Vernon Street, Dorchester 
(617) 533-2267

Daniel Driscoll Neponset Health Center, 398 Neponset Avenue, Dorchester
(617) 533-2267

Harbor Community Health Center – Plymouth, 10 Cordage Park, Suite 115, Plymouth
(508) 778-5449 for an appointment with our community health worker

Harbor Community Health Center – Hyannis, 735 Attucks Lane, Hyannis
(508) 778-5413

SNAP application assistance is one of the many food access programs and connection to resources we offer patients and members of the community at our health centers.  Ask at your appointment with our community health worker to get information about other resources or visit hhsi.us/FoodAccess.