Mount Carmel Clinic is a community health center in Winnipeg’s North End. It was founded in 1926.[1]
The clinic was established by Jewish community there; Jews had immigrated to Winnipeg in the late 19th century and had contributed to building the city and its economy but were excluded from many aspects of society; they built the clinic to serve their medical needs.[2]
Anne G. Ross joined the staff a nurse around 1950; she had been raised in the neighborhood. At the time the clinic had only two employees and was little-used. Over time she rose to become its executive director and led its transformation into a health center serving the needs of the local community.[3]
References
edit- ^ Woods, D (February 1973). "Winnipeg's Pre-Hastings Community Health Centre". Canadian Family Physician. 19 (2): 85–9. PMC 2370842. PMID 20468892.
- ^ Wolfe, Scott (8 June 2018). "Tracing the Early Origins of Community Health Centres". International Federation of Community Health Centres.
- ^ Adams, Ian (26 August 1972). ""There Should Be More Places Like This": Patients almost like going to the Mount Carmel Clinic in Winnipeg. If s a place that's as much a part of the community as the corner grocery". The Globe and Mail. p. A2.
External links
editFurther reading
edit- Ross, Anne (1998). Clinic with a heart: the story of Mount Carmel Clinic. Mount Carmel Clinic. ISBN 978-0968460702. OCLC 71768942.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Rizzo, Dee Dee; Watts, B. A (1986). Mount Carmel Clinic: a history, 1926-1986. Mount Carmel Clinic. OCLC 46573714.