New Orleans Musicians' Clinic

The New Orleans Musicians' Clinic (NOMC) is a health service providing New Orleans musicians with access to affordable medical services, stressing prevention and advocacy, and utilizing such facilities as a medical school, volunteers and community providers.

The NOMC is a subsidiary arm of the New Orleans Musicians' Assistance Foundation (NOMAF).

Founder

The NOMC was the brain-child of Dr. Jack McConnell MD, (retired),[1] as he performed "Bill Bailey" with the highly successful rock band Phish, at the 1997 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.

The idea behind the clinic

McConnell met with a team of health advocates for the working poor in Louisiana and musicians' advocates to come up with a medical safety net for New Orleans' musicians. Louisiana has had universal health care since the 1930s, when Louisiana Governor Huey P. Long (1928–1932) pushed a number of bills through the 1929 session of the Louisiana State Legislature to fulfill campaign promises including an unprecedented universal health program for hospitals and universal "charity" care.[2] In 1995, McConnell set out to design a comprehensive health care system to treat musicians.[3]

Sphere of Support: Medical, Emotional, Financial, and Social

The NOMC's expanded social services include the registration of patients in pharmaceutical assistance programs, crisis and case management, electronic medical records, identifying musician-patients, referral to and follow-up with appropriate agencies, and involvement in regular meetings with partnering organizations to provide outreach to patients in non-clinical settings.[3] The clinic is also involved in local government efforts to improve the health of musicians, such as supporting a ban on smoking in New Orleans bars.[4]

Partnerships

The NOMC works with neighborhood groups like the Musicians' Protective Union. In the Tremé neighborhood (the historic birthplace of Jazz), NOMC collaborated to create the St. Anna's Episcopal Church Musicians' Mission, a lively jam session held weekly, which includes a free meal and a "resource hall", providing multiple services such as 5 point anti-stress acupuncture, legal advice, housing assistance, and medical and mental health screenings, and social service referrals.[3]

New Orleans Musicians Assistance Foundation

The New Orleans Musicians Assistance Foundation (NOMAF) evolved from the NOMC following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, sharing the mission and promise to keep New Orleans music alive. NOMAF encompasses the Musicians' Clinic as well as the NOMAF Gig Fund, which provides occupational opportunities for our musicians, the Emergency Fund, the Prevent Death by Lifestyle Program to engage our patients in their own wellness strategies, the Herman Ernest Memorial Health Screening Initiative which provides head and neck cancer screenings in conjunction with the Interfaith community and the Tulane University School of Medicine.

Herman Ernest Memorial Screening Initiative with Healing Hands Across the Divide

The Herman Ernest Memorial Screening Initiative is a component of NOMAF's partnership with Healing Hands Across the Divide (HHAD), a public outreach program of the Department of Otolaryngology at Tulane University School of Medicine. This program honors the life of Herman "Roscoe" Ernest III and was formed in March 2011, shortly after he lost his brave battle to oral cancer. Before his tragically early death, Roscoe challenged his medical support staff at NOMAF and his doctors at Tulane to promote head and neck cancer awareness, prevention, and early detection throughout his community. African Americans have twice the mortality rate of their non-African American counterparts,[5] and this is in part due to African Americans presenting with a late stage of cancer at the time of diagnosis.[6] Early detection of such cancers is key to improving survival rates. Since March 2011, HHAD has partnered with several local churches and community events to spread awareness about head and neck cancers and conduct cancer screenings . This project is important for all members of the community but especially musicians due to their increased occupational exposure to tobaccos and alcohol, both risk factors for developing head and neck cancer.

References

  1. Jack McConell: What have you done for someone today? Tony Bartelme
  2. Long, Huey P. (1996). Every Man a King: the Autobiography of Huey P. Long. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80695-9.
  3. Do Ya Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans Medical Problems of Performing Artists, vol 2, 135–138, December 2007
  4. Copeland, CS (November–December 2015). "Clearing the Air: New Orleans Stubs Out Bar Smoking. Is Baton Rouge Next?" (PDF). Healthcare Journal of New Orleans: 34–41.
  5. Goodwin, WJ; Thomas, G. R.; Parker, D. F.; Joseph, D.; Levis, S.; Franzmann, E.; Anello, C.; Hu, J. J. (March 2008). "Unequal burden of head and neck cancer in the United States". Head and Neck. 30 (3): 358–371. doi:10.1002/hed.20710.
  6. Henry Ford Health System. "New look at racial disparities in head and neck cancer". ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 6, 2012.
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