Local News
Belanger named Citizen Doctor of the Year
Dr. John Belanger, medical director of the Paint Lick Family Clinic, recently was awarded the 2009 Citizen Doctor of the Year Award by the Kentucky Academy of Family Physicians.
The Citizen Doctor of the Year Award honors a community-minded family physician who provides compassionate, comprehensive care. The award recognizes physicians for their service as role models in their communities, both professionally and personally, with nominations submitted by other health care professionals, physicians in training and medical staff.
Employees from Saint Joseph—Berea who have worked with Dr. Belanger since he first came to Berea were the principal community members who submitted him for the award.
“He has done so much for so many,” said Flora Washburn, mission leader and chaplain at Saint Joseph—Berea.
Belanger opened the Paint Lick Family Clinic in 2000. It is a community owned non-profit organization with a mission is to provide excellent health care regardless of the patient’s ability to pay. Before starting the clinic, Belanger practiced for 10 years in a community health center in McKee. Recognizing that much of his time was spent tackling paperwork and dealing with government bureaucracy, he decided it was time to make a radical change.
Paint Lick Family Clinic maintains a very low overhead to provide care at the lowest cost possible. The clinic operates on a cash-only basis, independent of federal funding and insurance companies, which allows them the flexibility to focus on providing services rather than concentrating on reimbursements.
The average charge is $20 and patients are asked to pay what they can, when they can. The clinic never turns away patients because of their inability to pay. The low overhead also is made possible by Belanger’s requested salary, which is at a level less than many first year family medicine residents.
A press release from Saint Joseph—Berea commends Belanger’s commitment to his mission.
“Belanger lives by his mission,” said the release from Katie Heckman, the hospital’s community relations manager. “In one account of his service, a Hispanic mother was looking for medical care for an ill child late on a Friday afternoon. After being told by numerous offices they would not be seen unless they could pay a sizable fee up front, they came across the name of Dr. Belanger. Upon being contacted, he waited in his office until the mother and child could arrive, which lasted well into the evening. A contribution to the clinic was all that was asked for, only if there was ability to give.”
Belanger turned a dream of service into a reality by writing grants, renovating an abandoned building and fusing volunteers and staff into a team, the release said.
“When he made it his mission to start the Paint Lick Family Clinic, the community opened their wallets, lifted their hammers, and joined their hearts with his to make the clinic a reality,” Heckman’s release said. “Picture a doctor with hammer in hand and stethoscope hanging around his neck.”
- Local News
-
-
Summer camp ‘slip sliding away’
-
Berea’s ‘Head of the Holler’ series to air Sunday on KET
A new video series titled “Head of the Holler” and produced by Berea College will debut on KET through August. The first episode will air Sunday and will feature renowned author Silas House.
-
Reconstruction projects proposed
The public had an opportunity to ask questions and view proposed changes to the interchange at I-75 at KY 627 and the Colonel Road and Simpson Road intersection, during an informal meeting Thursday at White Hall Elementary School.
-
Berea man hit by car in serious condition
A Berea man is in serious condition after he was struck by a car Thursday evening.
-
BREAKING NEWS: Florida woman injured in crash near Berea
Berea Police responded Saturday to the scene of a multiple vehicle crashes on Interstate 75 northbound just north of Exit 76.
At about 9:30 a.m., two separate crashes occurred simultaneously when drivers attempted to avoid a ladder in the center lane of the roadway. -
Damage from Berea flooding about $892K
The water has long since seeped away, but the damage it left behind in Berea is now being tabulated.
-
Baldwin Farms shows plastic cover, irrigation
There has been no drought this summer. However, much of the rainfall has come in occasional downpours, which is not necessarily good for growing vegetables.
-
Berea man struck by car in serious condition
A Berea man is in serious condition after he was struck by a car Thursday evening. Frank Bloom, 59, is in serious condition at the University of Kentucky Medical Center. He walked into the parth of a car on KY 1016 at 9:30 p.m. Thursday, according to Berea Police. The accident occured in front of the Silver Creek Shell, 865 KY 1016.
-
Berea men indicted for passing forged checks
A Madison County grand jury returned an indictment Wednesday against two Berea men for allegedly passing multiple forged checks.
-
Hearing waived
A former employee of an adult day care facility waived her right to a preliminary hearing on an abuse charge Wednesday in Madison District Court.
- More Local News Headlines
-





