Monday, July 21, 2008 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Wenatchee area clinics are promoting services to migrants
It started in the orchards of Wenatchee 36 years ago — a couple of health professionals treating ailments of migrant farmworkers from...
The Wenatchee World
WENATCHEE — It started in the orchards of Wenatchee 36 years ago — a couple of health professionals treating ailments of migrant farmworkers from Arkansas and Oklahoma out of the back of a van.
Today, Wenatchee-based Columbia Valley Community Health operates on an $18 million annual budget, has more than 250 employees and serves 16,000 people annually, in Chelan and Douglas counties.
The private, nonprofit migrant and community-health clinic serves everyone but is targeted toward the low-income and migrants, says Carol McCormick, clinic-outreach coordinator and registered nurse.
The clinic offers medical, dental, maternity, pharmacy, lab, X-ray, mental-health and case-management services. It has a walk-in clinic.
For five years, the clinic has been working at the state-owned, county-operated migrant farmworker camps at Monitor and near Pangborn Memorial Airport. Doctors and other health-care workers visit the camps about 10 times through the tree-fruit harvest season.
McCormick, 54, a health-care provider for six years and former schoolteacher, says her greatest concern with the health of migrant farmworkers is their access to health care, which is impeded by two large barriers.
"One is their lack of knowledge of how to get services and whether or not they need services," she says. Frequently, they would rather suffer through an ailment because, out of necessity, work comes first, she says.
"The second barrier is a fear of racism and anxiety about finding themselves in compromising situations," she says.
Migrants have every imaginable health-care issue but will work with pain to avoid confusion, racism or anything negative, she says.
"Racism can be real or mistaken from cultural differences. We tend to speak louder than the rest of the world. When a Latino hears a loud voice they usually interpret it as anger, especially when they are having difficulty understanding what is being said," says McCormick, who speaks Spanish and knows something of the culture from living in Colombia and Costa Rica.
With the help of a federal grant called Steps to a Healthier USA, the clinic has partnered with the Chelan-Douglas Health District, Wenatchee Valley Medical Center, Gold's Gym, the YMCA, North Central Educational Service District, Central Washington Hospital, WSU Extension and others to focus on diabetes, asthma, nutrition, tobacco and obesity.
Help from grant
![]()
The grant has allowed McCormick to start a "promotores" program. Promotores are people from the target community who are not health professionals but are trained to recognize signs and symptoms of people needing medical services, McCormick says.
The program helps the clinic establish relationships with migrants, which are important because for migrants to access care they need to feel they have a relationship, she says.
School visits
Lupita Espinoza is one of the clinics five promotores, or health promoters.
She visits schools, exercise classes at the Wenatchee Community Center and migrant camps, getting to know people and looking for health issues.
She said she helped a woman in an exercise class get help for her depression and helped a heart-attack victim and diabetic get the right medication and start an exercise program at the YMCA.
"I have a passion to help people with their health care," Espinoza said. It stems, she said, from helping her shy mother find health services.
McCormick said clinic workers find a lot of migrants with heart conditions and diabetes who have run out of medications and don't know how to get more. She said it's hard to assess the overall condition of migrant health in general because many are young and healthy and others aren't, "but we've uncovered some pretty interesting medical cases," she said.
Once, when McCormick was doing blood-pressure checks on older men, a healthy-looking, 13-year-old boy asked that his be taken.
"He had such high blood pressure that I referred him to the physician assistant, who happened to be in the camp at the time," McCormick said. "It turned out he had osteomyelitis, an infection of the bone marrow, that could have had severe implications for him."
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 01:44 PM
List grows; 9 Seattle schools could be cut
Starbucks CFO: Company may miss 1Q profit estimate
Jerry Large: Correction? Try a connection
NEW - 02:49 PM
Abuse charges filed in assault of 2-year-old now in a coma
All viaduct options are unfriendly to pedestrians, study finds

This feature requires Flash 7.
Top video | World | Science / Tech | Entertainment
entertainment

events for Thursday, Dec. 4th
- Adaptation (Visual arts)
- UW Music: Wind Ensemble, Symphonic,... (Classical music)
- New Shift (Visual arts)
editors' picks
More shopping guides- Baby dies sleeping in car with parents in Lakewood
- Huskies Coaching Search | Texas Tech coach Mike Leach meets with UW
- Relative of slain Carnation family talks about the aftermath
- USC's Steve Sarkisian is added to Washington's coach list
- Mariners sign free agent Russell Branyan, hire Rick Adair, John Wetteland as coaches
- Atheists want God out of Ky. homeland security
- "Impeach Bush" ornament nixed
- Fox shows Olympia sign; calls come pouring in
- State suspends Seattle doctor's license in sex case
- List grows; 9 Seattle schools could be cut
- Danny Westneat | Real-estate bargains in the mist
- Michelle Obama's family: From slavery to White House
- Ancient pot stash found in China
- Washington banks trail industry in key indicators
- No woman is an island — unless she's on San Juan, offseason
- Ex-prosecutor's review finds fraud at Port of Seattle
- Nancy Leson | Good old Abruzzi's is back
- List grows; 9 Seattle schools could be cut
- Huskies Coaching Search | Texas Tech coach Mike Leach meets with UW
- "Impeach Bush" ornament nixed

