Concerns? Questions? Comments? Please feel free to email me
  + Larger Font | Smaller Font -
Search Google Search Brooklyn-usa.org
  :: Index
  Home Page
  Community Service Center
  Contact Us
  Photos
  Employment Opportunities
  :: Brooklyn Newspaper
Click Here
  :: Marty's Initiatives
  Send a Brooklyn Kid to Camp in the Country!
Click for more
 
  Visit Brooklyn - World class cultural institutions, amusement parks, and hot nightspots
Click for more
 
  Poetry For All!
Click for more
 
  Because He'll Live to Love you Longer!
Click for more
 
  Lighten Up Brooklyn
Click for more
 
  Employ an Ambitious Brooklyn Teen for the Summer!
Click for more
 
  Signs welcome motorists to the greatest borough in the world.
Click for more
 
  Graffiti Free Brooklyn
Click for more
 
  :: Quick Links
  :: Brooklyn Highlights
  Borough Hall Images
  Borough Hall Exhibitions
  From Brooklyn?
  Interactive Brooklyn Map
  Old Brooklyn Photos
     

More weather by AccuWeather®
     
 
  Home | Press Room | Photo Release  
 
    July 8, 2009
 
 


BP MARKOWITZ STATEMENT ON CLOSING OF LONG ISLAND COLLEGE HOSPITAL SCHOOL-BASED HEALTH CLINICS

“I am deeply disappointed that four Long Island College Hospital (LICH) school-based health clinics that benefited six schools in Downtown Brooklyn have been closed. It’s unfortunate that innovative ideas and funding mechanisms that would have kept the doors of these vital clinics open could not be found.

The importance of these school-based clinics cannot be underestimated. They serve as the first line of defense when we face health threats such as MRSA and the H1N1 flu. In addition, research and evaluations have demonstrated that school-based health centers represent cost-effective investments of public resources by reducing inappropriate emergency use, reducing hospitalization and increasing school attendance. Also, students who have access to these services can better manage their personal health and are more informed about health issues overall.

As was pointed out last year when my office and other advocates fought to save LICH, it would be one thing if neighborhoods served by LICH and these school-based clinics were facing significant population declines, but let’s face it, all you have to do is walk down Court Street, Smith Street or Atlantic Avenue and count the strollers, or see the small children crowding area parks, or check out the number of students overfilling neighborhood schools to know that there is an exploding population of young families in great need of school-based medical services. Not only that, this community is expected to grow by 15 to 20 thousand residents in the years ahead.

The closing of these school-based health programs is unthinkable and could have disastrous effects on the health and well-being of students in Downtown Brooklyn. I call on the New York State Department of Health and New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to work with all stakeholders to come up with creative ways of saving these clinics and ensuring the good health of our students throughout the summer and for the new school year this fall.”
 
 
Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz 209 Joralemon Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 - 718-802-3700