Central City Community Health Center (CCCHC) Inc., is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit, Section-330 Federally Qualified Health Center. CCCHC was established in 1994 to serve low-income and medically underserved residents that fall below the 200-percent Federal Poverty Level.
CCCHC operates five community health centers. Three of which are located in Orange County in the cities of Anaheim, Stanton, and Garden Grove. The oldest is located in South Los Angeles and the newest addition is in Norco, Riverside County. CCCHC also has two licensed mobile clinics. One mobile provides medical and mental health treatment to the homeless and migrant seasonal farm workers in Los Angeles and Orange County. While the second mobile services schools in the Anaheim, Garden Grove and Magnolia school districts.
CCCHC is a Community Partner (PCP) with the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services and the Department of Mental Health for Healthy Way LA and holds a Healthcare for the Homeless (HCH) subcontract. Central City also contracts with The Health Care Agency of Orange County to provide services to the indigent.
In 2012, Central City Community Health Centers provided health services to approximately 22,000 unduplicated patients which resulted in approximately 80,000 patient visits.
Welcome to the bright lights and big-city allure of California’s largest metropolis. Here, A-list celebrities really do walk the sidewalks, triple-shot macchiatos in one hand, cell phones in the other. While travelers may bypass much of the city by staying on a network of freeways that crisscross the region, they’re missing L.A.’s hidden gems. Turn off onto side streets to discover inviting neighborhoods, incredible museums, and shopping hot spots. And when the sun sets, L.A. comes to life in a whole new way, with clubs thumping to the beat of the latest indie band, a flock of starlets swaying in the front row. Rooftop restaurants, bars, and pools draw slinky-sexy crowds, while searchlights arc through the night sky, announcing the latest silver-screen premier.
Hip and historic, Downtown Los Angeles (or simply DTLA) offers big-city excitement with restaurants, cultural attractions, and major league sports. An influx of new residents has helped energize the area, and downtown’s re-emergence has also been spurred by such attractions as Grand Park, an urban oasis with views stretching from the Music Center (including Walt Disney Concert Hall) to City Hall.
Start your exploration with a full stomach. The reinvented Grand Central Market, originally opened in 1917, now has artisanal food purveyors selling of-the-moment items (Belcampo grass-fed beef burgers, build-your-own ice cream sandwiches at McConnell’s Fine Ice Creams) next to longtime vendors, like Wexler’s Deli. Vintage buildings have also been transformed, including the ornate 1927 United Artists building on Broadway, where the Ace Hotel Downtown Los Angeles offers stylish digs and a restaurant. Crowds flock to the sports and entertainment combo of Staples Center and LA LIVE, where you can also see music artifacts (Elvis’s sheet music, Michael’s glove) at the Grammy Museum and catch concerts at the Nokia Theatre. And Grand Avenue is the city’s cultural hub, thanks to Los Angeles Philharmonic performances at spectacular Walt Disney Concert Hall and the sandstone-clad Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA).