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When I visited Dr. James Gingerich, he launched into some of the nerdiest bragging I鈥檝e ever heard.
We were chatting in front of his stand-up desk at Maple City Health Care Center, the clinic he founded and runs in Goshen, Ind.
鈥淗ere鈥檚 our data,鈥 he said, and started clicking through a set of preventive care benchmarks.
His graphs compare Maple City鈥檚 performance to that of other clinics across the state 鈥 clinics like his that get federal funds.
Maple City is a federally qualified health center 鈥 a designation for community-based clinics in underserved areas that take all patients regardless of ability to pay.
The other clinics are getting their butts kicked.
Federal goals say 80% of kids should be fully vaccinated by age 2. 鈥淵ou can see we鈥檙e at 84%,鈥 Gingerich said. 鈥淭he next highest in the state is 63. The average in the state is 27.鈥
Really?
鈥淵ep.鈥 He was just getting started. 鈥淣ext, cervical cancer screening 鈥︹
Federal goal: 93%. Maple City: 94%. 鈥淲e鈥檙e the only one I know of in the entire Midwest that鈥檚 above 90,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he next highest in the state is 68, and the average is 51. OK?鈥

On and on. Adult screenings for colon cancer, breast cancer, depression. Pediatric weight screening and nutritional counseling.
鈥淥K, next: diabetes control,鈥 Gingerich said. 鈥淎re you getting the idea here? after measure.鈥
How?
鈥淲e have relationships with patients, and so they trust us,鈥 he said.
The trust is earned, he said, by meeting patients where they are. The clinic earns trust by being available, structuring providers鈥 days so there鈥檚 always time to squeeze in an extra patient, or three, or more. It earns trust by being hyper-affordable: maintaining a sliding scale for fees, charging nothing for preventive screenings and dispensing prescription medication on-site, for a flat $5 rate.
Gingerich said trust is also earned by listening carefully.
鈥淭here are very few things we do that are more important in primary care than to really listen carefully to patients' stories,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he rest is housekeeping. You have to take care of the housekeeping, but it's only housekeeping.鈥
This is the payoff: 鈥淲hen that mom comes in with her kid who鈥檚 sick and she needs a pap smear, she鈥檒l let us do the pap smear on the spur of the moment,鈥 Gingerich said.

At 60, Gingerich is bespectacled and bearded, his hair combed back above the ears, mostly salt, his eyebrows dark and bushy. On the wall above his desk is a picture from his high school yearbook. Eighteen-year-old Gingerich is barely recognizable 鈥 with sandy hair drooping around his face, vaguely mushroom-styled.
But the idea for Maple City took shape only a few years after that photo was taken, when Gingerich was an undergraduate at Goshen College, which is affiliated with the Mennonite Church USA.
Gingerich is the son of Mennonite missionaries. In college he lived in a Mennonite community in the low-income neighborhood where his clinic now sits. He and the other Mennonites聽did 鈥渙utreach projects.鈥 Gingerich says he loved the relationships they built. And he saw a need for better health care in the neighborhood.
Those experiences shaped his life and career.
鈥淚 really went to medical school, not because I wanted to be a doctor 鈥 I went to medical school because I wanted to do this project.鈥
Goshen, known as the Maple City, is a town of more than 30,000 near Indiana鈥檚 northern border with Michigan 鈥 with dozens of freight trains lumbering through every day, tying up traffic.
For decades Goshen was one of the Midwest鈥檚 many 鈥,鈥 where people of color were warned not to linger after dark. In more recent decades, the town renounced that heritage, including with a formal city council resolution in 2015 acknowledging the disturbing history.听And the town has become more diverse. These days Goshen鈥檚 schools are about half Latino, half white.
However, some tensions remain.
And now, bridging lingering divides is part of how the clinic presents its mission.听鈥淧eople think of us as a medical organization. We're not. We are fundamentally a peace and justice organization that happens to be engaged in our community through medical care.鈥 That鈥檚 Gingerich quoting one of the center鈥檚 board members 鈥 a sentiment he repeats to visitors a lot.
Leticia Inchauregui, a 52-year-old patient with diabetes, is getting a checkup and renewing her insulin and other prescriptions. The doctor鈥檚 visit and all her meds cost $45 altogether.
She calls the center 鈥渁 huge blessing鈥 and emphasizes 鈥渉ow important this place is to us as Latinos.鈥

She spoke in Spanish, and one of Maple City鈥檚 staff interpreters translated for me.
She said that at other health care providers, 鈥渋f you don鈥檛 have insurance, no one wants to take care of you. Here, they don鈥檛 discriminate against anyone.鈥
The clinic has always offered heavy discounts to uninsured patients 鈥 including undocumented immigrants who don鈥檛 qualify for Medicaid. But the clinic does charge a nominal amount.
鈥淚f it's really good health care, it has to be a collaborative process, and that means that everybody has to be doing what they can,鈥 Gingerich said.
An office visit might be as little as $5.
However, the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis tested Maple City鈥檚 commitment to providing affordable care.
Goshen and nearby Elkhart, Ind., had a huge spike in unemployment. The area lost lots of jobs.
鈥淎ll of a sudden, you had families that had no source of income anymore,鈥 Gingerich said.
鈥淵ou had four or five families piling together into one house just to have a place to sleep, and one wage earner, maybe. In the midst of that, $5 for an office visit suddenly became prohibitive.鈥
Many patients stopped showing up, and the staff was stymied.
At one staff meeting, Gingerich said, someone raised a question about the missing patients: 鈥溾業f they don't have money, what do they have?鈥 And the obvious answer was: time.鈥
So the clinic developed a new plan: Patients who couldn鈥檛 pay in cash could volunteer for local nonprofits, for schools 鈥 anyplace they liked 鈥 and earn $10 an hour in credit toward their health care bills.
It worked. 鈥淎ll of a sudden, we had these people who were coming back with these coupons and saying 鈥楢hora puedo pagar!鈥 [Now I can pay!] 鈥 and getting re-engaged in care, and we knew immediately it was working.鈥
Financing the clinic鈥檚 work has taken plenty of creativity, said Maple City鈥檚 finance director, Karen Miller Rush.
鈥淲e鈥檝e tried to squash our salary scale way down,鈥 she said, 鈥渟o our providers are making a lot less than they would otherwise.鈥
Most doctors at Maple City earn $125,000 a year, which Gingerich estimates is 40% of what other local physicians make. To offset that disparity, doctors working at the center qualify for a federal student loan forgiveness program.

About nine years ago, the center applied to become a federally qualified health center, and later received major federal grants for the first time. 鈥淭hey had held off on that,鈥 said Miller Rush, 鈥渒nowing that there were some hoops to jump through.鈥
The designation qualifies Maple City for special funding 鈥斅爏o the center can offer low-cost prescription drugs and collect higher Medicaid reimbursements than other providers.
Federal funds allowed the center to double in size; it currently serves about 6,500 patients. But that also meant more bureaucracy.
鈥淲hen we doubled in size, I would say we probably quadrupled in the number of meetings we have,鈥 Gingerich said.
So, despite its successes, Gingerich said he doesn鈥檛 intend Maple City clinic to get much bigger.
鈥淲e're probably getting to the limits of the size we can accommodate, with the kind of culture we're trying to foster,鈥 he said.
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