Sikh Center to be Site of Free Medical Clinic

November 20, 2000

Source: Los Angeles Times

On November 20, 2000, the Los Angeles Times reported that "the Indian Medical Assn. of Southern California is proposing to open a free medical clinic at the Sikh Center in Santa Ana. The Sikh Center is offering the group of doctors free use of a house on its campus for the clinic. The two groups are negotiating over hours and how much space the clinic would need. The plan is to help not only center members, but also those in the surrounding community who can't afford health care, said Dr. Sudeep Kukreja, president of the 600-member medical association...Kukreja said he and other doctors plan to volunteer their services and dispense free pharmaceutical samples to patients. Association fund-raisers and membership fees would help offset other expenses. Outreach efforts of this kind have become a tradition of the association--billed as one of the largest ethnic medical groups in the state. Its physicians are of Indian ancestry, most from East India. Since the Orange County-based organization was established more than 20 years ago, it has provided free health fairs at least three times a year in Southland communities...Dr. Krishan Khurana, president of the Sikh temple and a physician himself, said the clinics would be of special help to temple members, particularly the elderly who speak Punjabi, and visitors from India. The clinic has a 50-50 chance of becoming a reality, Khurana estimated. An important issue the temple and doctors are negotiating is ensuring the clinic would not interfere with temple functions and temple groups that also use the house...The medical group's umbrella organization, the American Assn. of Physicians of Indian Origin, is the largest ethnic medical group in the nation, with about 35,000 member doctors. The national association runs similar clinics in Chicago, Dallas, Houston and Flint, Mich. Charitable work has been a hallmark of Kukreja's career. This year he has traveled to South Vietnam and Lithuania to provide free medical services. 'I really love doing that,' he said. 'If I wasn't there, that person wouldn't have gotten that help.' Kukreja calls these trips 'working vacations.'"