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Dateline: September
27,
2001
Doctor
breaks ground on new health clinic
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Ground
was broken last Thursday on a new health clinic that is expected to meet
the needs of Donley County citizens for the foreseeable future.
Dr.
John Howard is building the facility on land adjoining what is coming to
be known as the Medical Center campus
– the area on Hwy 70 North which includes the Medical Center
Nursing Home and office of the Donley County Hospital District along with
future offices for the state departments of health and human services and
the future home of the local ambulance service.
Construction
of the health clinic is expected to take 180 days, and Howard says he
believes local people are excited about the project.
“People
are looking forward to this,” he said. “I’ve received only words of
encouragement.”
The
5,500 square foot clinic will be a frame building with a brick and stucco
veneer and a hipped roof. The design will be similar to the two nearby
buildings already under construction by the hospital district.
Howard
says his Clarendon Family Medical Center needs the new home because it has
outgrown its current facility at the corner of US 287 and Orpe Street. The
old building is not easily accessible to the handicapped, has only three
exam rooms, and is facing other constraints of space.
The
new building will have six exam rooms for use by Howard and his staff
along with three additional exam rooms that could be used immediately by a
visiting doctor – such as a cardiologist – or could eventually be used
if the clinic grows to need a second physician’s assistant.
Each
exam room is designed with the patient’s privacy in mind. The entrances
to the rooms are located away from main corridors, and each room will have
a curtained area so patient’s can undress in private. Walls throughout
the building will be insulated for soundproofing purposes.
The
building will include an X-ray room, lab, and a minor treatment room
located just a few yards away from the new Associated Ambulance Authority
facility, which is now being constructed nearby. If personnel in the
health clinic determine a patient needs to be transported to Amarillo
immediately, the close proximity of the ambulance service will be
invaluable.
The
health clinic will have an ample waiting area with an adjoining play area
for children. An injection room will be available for allergy shots,
eliminating the need for those patients to wait for an exam room to open
up.
Telemedicine
capabilities will also be available in the new clinic, which will enable
Howard and his staff to consult in real time with hospitals and doctors in
Amarillo or elsewhere. The building will be wired with a T1 line – a
form of high-speed Internet telecommunication.
Howard
says the new facility will be a much more workable space and should meet
the needs of the community for the foreseeable future.
The
building has been designed by architect Leslie Rohan of Panhandle, and
Cruz Construction of Amarillo is the general manager for the project.
Cruz
oversaw the recent renovation of the Medical Center Nursing Home and is
working on the new Community Services Building and ambulance facility for
the hospital district.
Howard
says by using the same construction firm as the hospital district he hopes
to keep the cost of the project down. The district sold Howard the
property on which his clinic will sit, and his patients will use drives
and parking areas maintained by the district.
“It’s
an example of us working together,” Howard said. “If I tried to do
this by myself, I wouldn’t be able to do as much.”
The
doctor also likes the idea of having the community’s other health
providers near his new clinic.
“I
think the trend has been to consolidate. Just look at Amarillo with the
hospitals, the cancer center, etc. To provide health services in a central
location makes sense.”
Howard
says he already has a lot of contact with residents in the nursing home,
and having his clinic close by will be a benefit to them. The doctor also
said the proximity of his clinic will be beneficial if the hospital
district pursues future plans to build a nearby assisted living center.
In
January of 1999, Howard broke one national trend – that of doctors not
coming to live in small towns – when he moved here with his family.
Baptist St. Anthony’s Hospital closed the Donley County Rural Health
Clinic later that same year, and Howard went into business for himself and
took over the clinic.
Today,
with financing from the Community Bank and the Donley County State Bank,
Howard is paying for the new clinic himself.
The
doctor won’t put a price tag on the new building except to say,
“It’s the largest investment I’ve ever made.”
Howard
is proceeding with the new clinic even though the current world situation
could affect him directly. He has served as a doctor in the Marines and is
still a commander in the Navy Reserve.
He
is keenly aware that he could be called to active duty but says that
he is not altering his plans and that the last thing Americans
should do is give in to fear.
“In
spite of the intense world situation, I’m as committed as ever to
continuing my practice here,” he said. “The current war and
possibility of recession don’t change Donley County’s need for
expanded health care capabilities.”
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