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QuickMed pitches city‑owned ‘community concierge’ clinic to Struthers council; members agree to explore grants
Summary
QuickMed CEO Lina told the Struthers City Council Finance & Legislation committee that the company can run a city‑owned clinic that would offer no‑cost primary and urgent care to residents and participating employers; presenters estimated roughly $3 million in initial grant funding and about $120,000 monthly operating costs and asked council to signal whether staff should pursue grants.
Lina, chief executive officer of QuickMed, and consultant Kristen Olmi presented a proposal to the Struthers City Council Finance & Legislation committee to pilot a city‑owned “community concierge” clinic that would provide free access to basic urgent and primary care for city residents and employees.
QuickMed said the model would combine walk‑in urgent care, scheduled primary care, occupational health, telehealth and limited on‑site imaging. “We operate urgent‑care–primary‑care hybrids seven days a week,” Lina said, describing the company’s regional footprint and school‑based programs. Presenters said the clinic would be owned by the city, with QuickMed contracted to staff and manage daily operations.
Kristen Olmi, who introduced the funding…
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