The successful implementation of medical homes into the JPS Health Network in recent years is a driving force behind the inclusion of more medical homes as part of the JPS Future Plan. The $800-million bond referendum approved for JPS includes preliminary plans to add at least four more medical home facilities, with at least one coming in the first phase of the project, allowing JPS to provide more people with readily accessible healthcare services.
Today the JPS Patient Tower is a familiar part of the Fort Worth skyline. It’s hard to imagine Main Street without it. But when it was built 50 years ago, the 11-story structure was a real difference maker for team members who staffed it and the patients who counted on the health network for care.
The FDA has authorized an additional dose (booster) of both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines in certain immunocompromised individuals. JPS will begin offering this additional dose to patients and team members who meet the following criteria or are evaluated to have an equal level of health risk:
A new era of Behavioral Health care has begun at JPS Health Network.
On Wednesday, August 4, movers packed up desks, copy machines, and other equipment at the Hemphill Outpatient Behavioral Health Clinic located on the southwest corner of the JPS campus in Fort Worth. They moved it all a couple blocks to the north to 601 W. Terrell Avenue where the JPS Center for Behavioral Health Recovery opened August 9.
Some people are quick to claim it’s the people – not the buildings – which count when it comes to healthcare delivery.