WHAT WE DO
National Network
SAN FRANCISCO PENINSULA Children's Health Project
The San Francisco Peninsula Children’s Health Project (SFPCHP) provides comprehensive medical care to unstably housed and uninsured adolescents ages 12-25.
Although there are many affluent communities in Santa Clara, San Mateo and San Francisco counties, the number of youth experiencing homelessness remains high: an estimated 1,155 in Santa Clara County, 283 in San Mateo, 1,073 in San Francisco during 2022. Many of these young people are in crisis and their prospects for having stable shelter has decreased, as the cost of housing has soared in this area and jobs for young people with minimal skills are increasingly difficult to find.
Of the patients served by SFPCHP, 40% are experiencing homelessness, or are displaced, or unstably housed. Because SFPCHP targets uninsured adolescents, 50% of patients it sees are uninsured. These young people have multiple and complex medical, and psychosocial issues, including malnutrition, missed immunizations, poly-substance abuse, depression, and anxiety disorders.
These conditions are worsened due to a lack of prevention and early intervention, access to medications, and an inability to access comprehensive health care services.
Services Provided
- Primary Care
- Mental Health Services
- Case Management
- Health & other Nutrition Education
- Nutrition
- Telehealth
PROGRAM FACTS
Partner Institution:
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford
Partners Since
1997
Total Visits in 2022:
1,124
Patients in 2022:
1,916
Focus Areas:
Demographic Snapshot:
81% identify as Hispanic/Latino
40% Unhoused
84% are adolescent
53% identify as female
Service Delivery:
Mobile Medical; School-linked; Telehealth
Ages Served:
3-24