, Staff Writer
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CARRBORO -
Anna McCullough was only three or four weeks into her master's program at the UNC School of Social Work when she volunteered at a Carrboro free clinic run by students from the School of Medicine and other medicine-related disciplines taught at UNC.But she remembers helping a patient in mental crisis feel more stable that first night and linking him to resources that could assist him."I thought, 'This is what it's all about,' " McCullough said.On Sunday, McCullough invited current and former student volunteers and the faculty who support them to a celebration at the Carrboro ArtsCenter, marking 40 years of the Student Health Action Coalition, known as SHAC.The organization runs a free medical clinic every Wednesday night in the Piedmont Health Services clinic in Carrboro and a twice-weekly dental clinic in Carr Mill Mall.SHAC has made its place in history by being the longest existing student-run free clinic in the United States, said Jim Emory, who researched the history for his master's degree in public health.SHAC is unique in its interdisciplinary approach and its community-service focus, Emory said. Students who volunteer are challenged to learn from the community they serve.When Hallam Gugelmann volunteered as a student leader at the clinic two years ago, he learned that there was a need for free dermatological services. A new relationship was formed with UNC's dermatology department, and a woman who had recently arrived from Mexico was able to get a large skin cancer removed from her nose as a result, Gugelmann said. Now, a dermatology clinic is offered twice a month.Seven disciplines at UNC work together to run the clinic -- medicine, nursing, dental, pharmacy, physical therapy, social work and public health. Faculty members in UNC's Department of Family Medicine take turns overseeing the students running the clinic.Tom Wroth, a UNC faculty member in the Department of Family Medicine, has been doing just that, and is now stepping up his involvement by becoming a faculty adviser to SHAC.Wroth said providing medical care to underserved patients feels good."If you have a patient who hasn't had medical care in 15 years and you diagnose that patient with hypertension or diabetes, that can be a lot more satisfying than fine-tuning someone who has a lot of monetary resources," Wroth said.
cheryl.sadgrove@newsobserver.com or (919) 932-2005
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