A new report released today by the
Institute for Social Policy and Understanding (ISPU) outlines
how Muslim community-based health organizations (MCBHOs) are
providing a critical safety net in health care access for the
most underserved communities in America. The first-of-its-kind
study, titled “Caring for Our Neighbors,” provides a deeper
understanding of the motivations that drive American-Muslim
health providers, the demographic makeup of the populations they
serve and the clinics’ growing role in American public health
and community building.
“The rise of these Muslim
health organizations draws an interesting parallel to other
religiously affiliated hospitals such as St. Luke’s or Cedars
Sinai, which initially were started to help those who couldn’t
get care anywhere else” said Lance Laird, ISPU fellow and author
of the report.
“That service model remains all
the more important today as rising health care costs are leaving
a growing number of families uninsured,” said Laird. “What we
found is that these clinics are stepping in to meet a critical
need in communities across America.”
The report tracks the development and service models of 10
Muslim health clinics in four U.S. cities with large populations of American
Muslims: Los Angeles,
Detroit,
Houston and Chicago.
“This pioneering study begins to paint a cohesive picture of
the valuable contributions being made every day by
American-Muslim health professionals,” said Dr. Faisal Qazi,
board member with the Association of Muslim Health Professionals
Foundation. “Whether running community health clinics focusing
on the underserved, working in nationally recognized research
institutions or serving as general practitioners, American
Muslim health professionals are motivated by our faith and a
strong desire to give back. For many of us this is truly faith
in action.”
Researchers found that while the clinics’ service models
vary, their services are universally available to everyone,
regardless of their patients’ ethnic or religious background, at
a low cost or even free of charge. As a result, the vast
majority of their patients come from families living below the
federal poverty level and almost always lack health insurance.
According the report’s findings, the clinics operate on lean
budgets, relying heavily on donated equipment and volunteer
physicians, many of whom are first-generation American Muslims
who are driven by a desire to give back to the country that
welcomed them as immigrants with open arms. The report also
documents the emergence of a new American-born generation of
Muslims dedicated to serving the only country they have ever
known.
ISPU conducted this study in colloboration with the
Association of Muslim Health Professionals (AMHP) Foundation (http://www.amhp.us/amhpfoundation.asp)
Muslim community-based health organizations have a history
that spans at least two decades in the United States. This study
is the first to closely examine how Muslim community-based
health organizations (MCBHOs) have developed and are providing
free or low-cost primary care services to low-income communities
in four cities with large and diverse American-Muslim
populations: Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, and Houston.
This analysis of 10 prominent MCBHOs in these cities opens a
window into the state of American-Muslim public health service.
With these health organizations, American Muslims are following
in the tradition of other religious minorities, including
Catholics and Jews, in initiating a new wave of institution
building that had in decades past concentrated on mosques and
schools. The rise of MCBHOs in recent years can be seen as an
indication of the American- Muslim community’s growing civic and
public service role in the cultural mainstream and the emergence
of a new American-born generation of Muslims dedicated to
serving the only country they have ever known.
MEDIA COVERAGE
Elena Lopez needed diabetes medication and was due for a
medical exam, but the 64-year-old had no health insurance.
So her daughter, Rosa Ramirez, took Lopez to the Ibn Sina
Foundation community clinic in southwest Houston, where she
paid a small fee to see a doctor on a walk-in basis.
"Otherwise, I couldn't afford to take her to the doctor,"
said Ramirez, who lives near the facility.
The clinic is one of many Muslim health facilities
popping up across the country, according to a report by the
Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, a national
nonprofit, policy-research organization. Most have a base
cliental of Muslims but serve the broader community.