That number is expected to rise as more people lose employer-sponsored insurance. Nearly 30 million (1 in 12) of the country’s most vulnerable residents - including 1 in 3 individuals living in poverty, 1 in 5 Medicaid beneficiaries, and 1 in 9 children - rely on federally qualified health centers such as Chase Brexton for their health care. “Direct Relief is doing everything possible to bolster the work and support the staffs at the safety-net health facilities on which so many patients and their families rely for excellent care and trust for advice in this public health emergency.” is more critical than ever with the onset of COVID-19,” said Direct Relief President and CEO Thomas Tighe. “Access to primary care is what keeps people healthy and out of the hospital, and the frontline work of Chase Brexton and other nonprofit community health centers across the U.S. “On behalf of myself and my Flight22 Foundation, we just want to say thank you guys for all your hard work and dedication during these tough times,” Gay said. Gay, a forward with the San Antonito Spurs, visited with Chase Brexton staff members on the front lines of the COVID-19 response in Baltimore, and thanked them for their tireless efforts. Vernon Center to present the funds.Ĭhase Brexton was among 518 federally qualified health centers to receive funding this week through Direct Relief’s $25 million Covid-19 Fund for Community Health, which recognizes the profound effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the finances, services, staff, and patients of community health centers. Chase Brexton recently received $50,000 in emergency grant funding from the medical aid organization Direct Relief, in partnership with the National Association of Community Health Centers-and Baltimore’s own NBA star, Rudy Gay, visited Chase Brexton’s Mt.