Fourth Ward Clinic is a federally qualified health center (FQHC) in Cypress, TX, providing primary care, dental, behavioral health, and pharmacy services to patients regardless of insurance status or ability to pay. Spring News covers FQHC funding, expansions, and access news for Cypress-area residents.
What is an FQHC? Federally qualified health centers are community-based clinics receiving funding from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) Bureau of Primary Health Care. To receive FQHC status, a clinic must serve a federally designated medically underserved area, offer sliding-fee scales based on income, accept Medicare and Medicaid, and operate under a community board with majority patient representation. FQHCs are required to provide primary care plus key enabling services (transportation, translation, case management) that remove access barriers for low-income patients.
Services typically offered at Fourth Ward Clinic include primary medical care for adults and children, dental care, behavioral health and substance use treatment, on-site pharmacy with discounted medications (under the federal 340B drug-pricing program), and women's health including prenatal care. Many FQHCs also offer immunizations, chronic-disease management for diabetes and hypertension, and HIV testing and treatment.
How are fees determined? FQHCs use a sliding-fee scale based on federal poverty guidelines and household income. Patients with no insurance and incomes at or below 100% of the federal poverty level typically pay a nominal fee (often $10-$30) for a primary-care visit. Patients with higher incomes pay scaled fees up to 200% of federal poverty, after which standard self-pay rates apply. Medicare, Medicaid, and most private insurance are accepted.
Who is eligible? Fourth Ward Clinic accepts all patients regardless of immigration status, insurance coverage, or ability to pay. FQHCs are explicitly designed as safety-net providers for the uninsured, underinsured, agricultural workers, people experiencing homelessness, and residents of public housing. Patients should call ahead to confirm appointment availability and bring proof of income (pay stubs, tax return, or self-declaration) to receive sliding-scale pricing.
Spring News covers FQHC news including HRSA grant awards, new service-delivery site openings, leadership transitions, and policy changes affecting Medicaid expansion and 340B drug pricing — all of which directly impact access at Fourth Ward Clinic. Tip about Fourth Ward Clinic or Cypress-area FQHCs: editor@nexcom.media. Data source: HRSA Bureau of Primary Health Care, Find a Health Center directory.
Spring News reports on FQHC funding, expansions, and access news for Cypress residents. See springnews.org/news for the latest healthcare coverage.