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Texas Children’s Hospital to close low-income health centers

Two Texas Children’s Centers
Two Texas Children’s Centers for Children and Women are closing, according to Texas Children’s officials. (Credit: Texas Children’s Hospital)

By Defender News Service

Low-income families will soon see their medical options reduced because Texas Children’s Hospital is closing its two Houston healthcare centers that serve communities in need.

The Centers for Children and Women, located in the Greenspoint area in north Houston and the location in the southwest part of the city, will be closing in the coming months, a hospital spokesperson said recently. The Greenspoint facility at 700 North Sam Houston Parkway West is closing on Dec. 1, and the 9700 Bissonnet St. Suite 1000 W location – which already has stopped accepting new patients – will close on June 30, 2024.

The two centers only serve patients with medical coverage through the Texas Children’s Health Plan, which is available to those who qualify for Medicaid or the federal Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). The facilities offer a range of healthcare services for children and women, including pregnancy care, dentistry, optometry, speech therapy, behavioral health services and a pharmacy.

A Texas Children’s spokesperson said in a statement the hospital system is closing The Centers for Children and Women because it “identified an opportunity to create a different paradigm and care model that will improve the quality of care and patient experience as well as expand the access we provide to not only the special population of our Health Plan families but to all our patients and families.”

“More details are coming,” the spokesperson added, “but this redesigned, optimized model will be bigger and better and will include many more locations and services for families to choose from. Ultimately, this will give families more options for care by Texas Children’s physicians closer to home in all the communities we serve.”

The statement from Texas Children’s did not address how many patients, physicians and other staff will be impacted by the closures and whether those employees will have the opportunity to transfer to other locations within the hospital system, which is based in the Houston area and also operates facilities in Austin and McAllen.

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Texas Children’s Health Plan members will continue to have the same coverage after the closures, according to information on the hospital system website, although they will need to find doctors at other locations. Impacted patients are being matched up with physicians close to their homes and can select other healthcare providers within the network if they wish.

frequently asked questions page on the Texas Children’s website says a “limited number of patients with high medical needs” can transfer from the Greenspoint location to the southwest Houston center between Dec. 1 and when the latter facility closes at the end of June.

Texas Children’s said in its statement it has “consistently developed and offered programs and services that prioritize access for our most vulnerable patient populations,” including through its Texas Children’s Health Plan. The centers designed to serve plan members, which are closing within a decade after they opened, are billed online as a “new kind of medical facility that puts everything in one place.”

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