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Georgia Clinic Closure Leaves Vulnerable Patients Stranded
29 Apr
Summary
- A 20-year-old clinic serving low-income, uninsured patients is closing.
- Funding challenges and difficulty securing grants led to the closure.
- Patients face difficult transitions to distant facilities with potential barriers.

A 20-year-old clinic in Fayetteville, Georgia, serving vulnerable residents, is set to close its doors permanently. The Fayette C.A.R.E. Clinic has been a lifeline for over 1,000 uninsured, low-income patients annually. Executive Director Geneva Weaver stated that the clinic could no longer sustain itself due to increasing difficulty in securing grants and donations.
Weaver described a pervasive misconception of Fayetteville as affluent, masking the reality that many rely on the clinic for essential care. As operations cease, staff are focused on assisting patients in transitioning to other facilities, such as The Healing Bridge Clinic, which is a 20-30 minute drive away. This transition poses significant challenges for patients lacking reliable transportation or the means to cover co-pays.
The clinic's closure reflects a larger issue of declining healthcare access in South Atlanta and across Georgia. Many residents fall into a 'coverage gap,' earning too little for private insurance but not qualifying for Medicaid. This situation leaves a significant portion of the state's population, over a million uninsured Georgians, with limited options for affordable care.