About the Student Outreach Clinic
The Student Outreach Clinic is operated by medical students of The University of Nevada School of Medicine. The clinic was founded by students in 1996 and continues to be operated by students under the guidance of licensed physicians. The purpose of the clinic is to provide free health care to those without medical insurance, allowing them to have access to medical care that they otherwise may not receive. The benefit to students is that they receive hands-on experience in treating patients from the very first day of medical school.
The Student Outreach Clinic is operated in cooperation with the Family Medicine Center and the University of Nevada School of Medicine, and made possible by faculty and community physicians who donate their time and talents to oversee the clinic. Services include general and acute medical care, gynecological exams, immunizations, and discounted laboratory services.
Currently there are three separate clinics (General, Children's, and Women's) run by the Student Outreach Clinic, each organized by a different group of student-managers. Although each clinic aims to treat a subset of the medically uninsured population, the mission of the clinic as a whole is:
- To provide significant and quality health services to the uninsured population of northern Nevada,
- To help medical students gain additional clinical experience and education so that they may continue to help others,
- To encourage cultural competence among medical students, and facilitate interaction with a patient population that may not otherwise be met during training, and
- To provide an opportunity for medical students to work in cooperation with other health care professionals early in training.
Further Information:
Directions to the clinic
Services offered at the clinic
Meet the clinic leadership
