Following a performance by Rev. Lois Dejean and Johnson Extension and the Next Generation, the late Dr. Merv Trail, then LSU Health Chancellor, told the crowd including doctors, nurses, musicians, community leaders, elected officials and Mardi Gras Indians, “As Louisiana’s flagship medical center, we feel a sense of responsibility to the people we serve, particularly those who have been under-served. Members of the music community have historically done without or had inadequate access to health care. As a result, we and the world, have lost far too many far too soon. Music makes our way of life incomparably rich. And for all of our problems, we are truly blessed to live in this place. We are very proud that LSU Medical Center is the birthplace of health care for musicians in the birthplace of jazz.”
In partnership with the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Foundation and the Daughters of Charity, LSU Medical Center and LSU Healthcare Network founded the first clinic of its kind in the country. Providing care to musicians on a sliding fee scale with a $10 minimum payment, for the first time, New Orleans musicians had access to health services tailored to their specific needs.Leslie Capo
Office: 504-568-4806
Cell: 504-452-9166
lcapo@lsuhsc.edu
Musicians' Clinic Info
Location: LSU Healthcare Network 3700 St. Charles Avenue
Hours: M-F, 9 AM - 5PM Phone: 504-412-1366To support the Musicians Clinic, visit New Orleans Musicians' Assistance Foundation
About John Lowery: www.raddy.bizAbout Naydja CoJoe
Since the concept was new and utilization was unknown, hours were limited to one afternoon a week at first. But it didn’t take long for increasing demand to expand the clinic.
“It dramatically changed my ability to work.”
“It’s great to have someone watching out for us instead of wondering how cheaply they can get us for a Saturday night.”"
“It doesn’t matter how successful you are; musicians live a hand-to-mouth existence; we need health care.”
“This town has a lot of aging musicians going on without health insurance. We’re losing too many players. If we can keep them a little healthier and going on, the community will certainly benefit.”Lowery credits the Musicians’ Clinic with saving his career.
“I first went because I hurt my voice. I couldn’t sing for a year.”Before he came back to New Orleans, a cup of scalding tea from a vending machine singed his vocal folds. “It was like a rope unraveling, like they were coming undone.”
And it meant he couldn’t work. But when he came home, he heard about the Musicians’ Clinic and made an appointment,
“They sent me to someone, a specialist who told me what to do. I did everything I was supposed to and after 4-5 months, my voice came back.”His praise is effusive. “I think it’s the best thing that ever happened in a musician’s life besides being blessed with a talent. The Musicians’ Clinic is a jewel. It is heaven sent. Without it, a lot of musicians would probably be dead because of a lack of care.”
CoJoe has been a patient for the past nine years. She says without LSU Health's Musicians' Clinic, she couldn't afford to go to the doctor.
At the Musicians’ Clinic, she sees whatever member of the health care team she needs.“These people are priceless. They are irreplaceable. It is amazing how many doctors are under one umbrella. And they take care of you with their hearts.”
Today, the Musicians’ Clinic is an even more valuable resource, despite the changes to the health care system over the last few years.
Catherine Lasperches, NP, the Clinic’s Family Nurse Practitioner says, “The clinic is valuable because even though we are able to enroll more patients in Medicaid thanks to the expansion, a lot of our patients who make too much for Medicaid cannot afford coverage through the Affordable Care Act. And since the ACA is not mandatory anymore, a lot of patients may choose to have nothing. We can help those patients!”