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This strategic report is analysis compiled from public sources (HRSA UDS, CMS, WARN Act filings, news coverage, public Glassdoor reviews). Claims about workforce stability, financial positioning, or operational resilience are informational only and may not reflect current operations. For authoritative information, contact the organization directly.
Resilience
Resilience grade: ASites
19
Staff
480+
Patients
90,000+
Low Risk
(81/100)Neighborhood Healthcare provides quality, comprehensive healthcare to everyone.
Overall Score: 81/100
Data completeness: 90%
4 active programs (excellent diversity)
No recent layoffs tracked
Modern EHR: OCHIN Epic
Glassdoor rating: 3.7/5 (good)
Moderate funding vulnerability
Regional Comparison: Neighborhood Healthcare scores 81 vs the San Diego average of 69.
Dental Coverage Eliminated for Undocumented Adults
2026-07-01
PPS Rates Eliminated for FQHCs Serving Undocumented Patients
2026-07-01
Work/Community Engagement Requirements Begin
2026-10-01
ECM Provider
NHSC Approved
EHR System
OCHIN Epic
Union Status
Non-Union
Active Openings
11
Glassdoor
Profile Source
CuratedCalMatters reports (May 2026) that California's community-based mobile crisis services — currently a statewide benefit — could become an optional Medi-Cal benefit after the Dec 2026 enhanced federal funding expires. Currently $65M (FY25-26) / $95.5M (FY26-27) of MCO Tax revenue supports community-based mobile crisis + transitional rent + BH provider rate increases. Strategic implication for FQHCs with BH integration (especially co-responder partnerships): (1) co-responder models with city/county dispatch may lose state-mandated reimbursement after Dec 2026; (2) mobile crisis FTEs (LCSWs, AMFTs, peer specialists) may shift from sustainable Medi-Cal billing to grant-dependent funding; (3) CalAIM ECM transitions that rely on mobile crisis as a bridge may need to design alternatives by Q4 2026; (4) FQHCs with established mobile crisis programs (especially in LA, SF, Sacramento, San Diego, Bay Area) should track whether the May 14 Revise confirms, accelerates, or pulls back this shift. Pairs with Newsom $5.8B BHCIP cumulative announcement and Lodi Wellness Center closure as the BH funding-reshuffle cluster.
San Diego County released its FY2026-28 Recommended Budget on May 1, 2026 — opening the public hearing window before June 24 adoption (current $8.63B budget expires June 30). The new budget cycle lands amid $300M/yr H.R. 1 county exposure, $1.4B in California federal cuts (incl. $1.1B Medi-Cal), and 327K–400K SD residents at risk of losing Medi-Cal. SD County's CMS (County Medical Services) program — the safety-net funder routing care through community health centers — was placed on the supervisor review list in February 2026 as part of the broader safety-net overhaul vote. Strategic implication for SD-area FQHCs (Family Health Centers of San Diego, San Ysidro Health, Neighborhood Healthcare, Vista Community Clinic, TrueCare, Operation Samahan, Imperial Beach Community Clinic): submit testimony during the public-hearing window, model multiple FY26-27 cash flow scenarios based on CMS contract continuity, and coordinate with the parallel LA County health-tax ballot measure timeline. Pairs with SBC May 5 budget workshop launching the broader county-budget cycle pressure cluster ahead of the May 14 May Revision.
SD County's 2026-28 Recommended Budget drops May 1, 2026 — the first budget cycle that will fully reflect H.R. 1 Medi-Cal cuts ($999M annual impact to the county). The FY25-26 budget currently stands at $8.63B. Public input closed March 22. FQHCs in San Diego (Family Health Centers, San Ysidro Health, Neighborhood Healthcare) should prepare to respond to county cuts that compound the existing Medi-Cal eligibility cliff (75,000 noncitizens in SD County lose coverage October 2026). Budget advocacy window opens once recommended budget is released.
OB Rag identifies the three named San Diego County hospitals on Public Citizen's 446-hospital watchlist: Scripps Mercy Hospital (San Diego), Sharp Chula Vista Medical Center, and Tri-City Medical Center (Oceanside). These facilities derive 20%+ of revenue from Medicaid and have run negative margins 2022–2024, making them first in line for service cuts or closure under H.R. 1's $911B/10-year Medicaid reductions. Projected California coverage loss: 1.4M in year one, 3.4M over 10 years.
Public Citizen released an April 17 report identifying 83 California hospitals (of 446 nationally across 44 states + DC) at heightened risk of closure, service cuts, or layoffs from H.R. 1's $911B Medicaid/CHIP cuts over 10 years. Three named hospitals are in San Diego County. Direct downstream FQHC implication: when local hospitals shed services, FQHC ED-diversion and specialty-referral pipelines collapse — pushing primary care demand into already-strained community health centers. Cross-references prior Neighborhood Healthcare 'hundreds of FQHCs will shut down' warning.
Neighborhood Healthcare piloted Nabla AI for ambient clinical documentation, cutting after-hours charting by over 50% and improving provider satisfaction scores.
Neighborhood Healthcare operates in California's San Diego region.
Regional FQHCs
13
Avg Resilience
69
Total Staff
7,897
Regional Jobs
177
Regional salary ranges (P25/P50/P75), open positions, and alerts when new openings post.
This report is auto-generated from our intelligence data assets. For inquiries, contact hello@fqhctalent.com