
A
new school-based health center at Randolph High School opened Nov. 17.
Plans to open the clinic, which is operated by Codman Square Health
Center, were first announced in 2022.
A
medical assistant treats a patient at a new school-based health clinic
at Randolph High School, run by Codman Square Health Center. Plans to
open the facility, which has four exam rooms and provides primary care
services, were announced in 2022; the facility started serving students
Nov. 17.
A long-running effort to bring expanded pediatric and primary care to Randolph has finally reached the finish line, as a clinic run by Codman Square Health Center and hosted in Randolph High School began operations Nov. 17.
The opening of the schoolbased clinic represents a milestone along a lengthy road toward increasing health care access in the town.
The new clinic joins a similar school-based health center operated by Codman Square at Tech Boston Academy in Boston. Across the Boston Public Schools district, 13 schools offer schoolbased centers in collaboration with either a community health center or the Boston Public Health Commission.
Michelle Tyler, the town’s director of planning who has helped steer much of the effort, said the process has been a labor of love.
“While I am tired, it’s also a happy tired, to see the project come to a conclusion and to see what it will mean for the community going forward,” she said.
The town has long struggled with a dearth of primary care options, especially for its younger residents.
A 2019 community wellness plan developed by the Metropolitan Area Planning Council found there were no outpatient facilities, urgent care centers, lab services, or medical specialists located in Randolph. (In 2023, an urgent care facility did open in the town, which, as of the 2020 Census, had a population of about 35,000). While some primary care practices did exist, they were limited to services for adults.
In a 2024 interview with the Banner, Tyler described the landscape as such that if a
student needed a sports physical, the process could be an all-day
affair as parents needed to take the day off work, pull their kid out of
school, and make the trek to a nearby facility or go all the way to
Boston.
While Randolph
falls within the service areas of four hospitals, residents reported
not feeling as welcome at those facilities, according to the 2019
Metropolitan Area Planning Council wellness plan.
The
new health center services should close some of those gaps, said Carme
Ogando-Saintil, a family medicine physician at Codman Square and medical
director at the new school-based clinic.
“Being within a community where you can access care,
where your insurance is accepted, where you’re able to serve an
underserved population, it’s going to be very helpful to the community,”
she said.
Tyler said
she expects that by reducing barriers, the services offered will also
increase the number of people actually seeking and accessing care.
During
the day, from 8 a.m. to about 1 or 2 p.m., the facility will serve
students from the adjoining high school as well as Randolph Public
School students from the town’s middle school and four elementary
schools.
The clinic will offer a
full slate of primary, preventative and wellness care, including
behavioral health care, vision and hearing screenings, vaccinations and
annual checkups and sports physicals.
The
health center said it accepts most commercial insurance plans, as well
as plans like MassHealth and Medicaid. The center also has a policy to
provide care regardless of insurance status or ability to pay.
By early afternoon, the Randolph clinic will transition from student-facing operations to serving the broader community.
“Everyone
that needs health care in the Randolph area and chooses to come to
Codman Square Health Center at Randolph High, we will be seeing in the
afternoons from about 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.,” said Dr. Guy Fish, Codman
Square’s CEO.
Fish
said the expansion was an important step for the health center to serve
the needs of its patient population by going into neighborhoods. He said
Codman Square Health Center conducted an analysis of the patients it
serves that found that of the roughly 25,000 patients who receive care
through the health center, 6000 live in Randolph and surrounding
communities.
Many, he said, moved out of the health center’s Dorchester neighborhood when they were priced out by rising rents.
According
to The Boston Foundation’s 2025 Greater Boston Housing Report Card, in
2025 the median sale price for a single-family home in Randolph was
$580,000. In Boston, the median sale price for a single-family home was
about $837,000.
Living further south comes with cheaper rents, but also, potentially reduced access to the health care services residents know and rely on.
“That
creates an enormous barrier to care, if every time that you want to see
the doctor, it’s a 10 mile drive — it takes you 20 minutes by car,
maybe it takes you a full day, round-trip, by bus,” Fish said. “That
barrier to care has been exactly why we’ve recognized that many of our
patients are now living well south of us, and we need to be where they
are.”
Although the new
clinic’s primary care services have not yet opened up to the public,
Ogando-Saintil shared an anecdote of meeting with one Randolph resident
who will not miss her trek to Boston for care.
“She
was so excited, and she was saying how it’s within walking distance for
her,” Ogando-Saintil said. “I think that there’s a need, and the
community is very excited about us going out there.”
The path to open the school-based center has been a long one.
The
town started working on the project in 2022, when Rep. Ayanna Pressley
scored $1 million in federal Community Project Funding. At the time,
those funds were expected to cover all the costs.
But
by 2024, rising costs pushed the project to $3.2 million and delayed
the clinic’s opening beyond its original early-2023 target.
Even
as the clinic opens to students, some lingering construction pieces of
the project, like installing a permanent HVAC system, still have to be
checked off. And services for the community at large are coming, but are
not open yet, Ogando-Saintil said.
While
the renovations have progressed on a delayed timeline, Codman Square
Health Center staff began to provide some care to students beginning in
2023, including some behavioral health care as well as sports physical
exams and vaccinations.
As
the project progressed, town leadership eyed what its opening could
mean for further expanding health care access in the town, with the
longterm vision of opening a full federally-qualified health center in
Randolph.
Tyler, who
has long been an advocate for bringing a full health center facility to
the town, said that’s still on her to-do list.
She
said that sort of resource would bring a full spectrum of important
primary care services to Randolph, as well as dedicated community health
workers who can connect residents from Randolph and nearby towns to
other resources.
“Health
centers typically serve [as] more than just a spot for primary care;
they really are kind of the nexus of all things related to health and
well being,” Tyler said.
A
lack of adequate testing, vaccine and treatment sites during the
COVID-19 pandemic highlighted that need, she said, and the town’s
growing population will continue to require expanded access to care.
“As
we continue to grow, we need to be able to support a quality of life
for all of those residents,” she said. “That includes providing primary
health care services so that folks don’t have to go those distances in
order to receive quality health care.”
Previously
in the mid- 2010s, a separate effort aimed to turn a municipal parcel
holding a then-unused elementary school into a community health center.
That plan would have built a
health center, to be operated by Mattapan Community Health Center, plus
a nursing program through Massasoit Community College and housing for
adults 55 years old and above.
That
proposal ultimately failed, potentially due to disagreements about the
rezoning that would have been required to see the facility built.
Fish
said that for Codman Square Health Center, that sort of effort for a
full health center is something they’d consider, but the idea had to go
on the back burner as they worked to get the school-based clinic up and
running.
Now that the
facility at Randolph High School is indeed up and running, with all the
appropriate sign-offs from the state, he said the idea is “certainly a
brighter blinking light on our radar than it was even a week ago.”
The
clinic at the town’s high school will be a valuable asset to serve
Randolph community members — especially those who have long-relied on
Codman Square’s services — but he said he anticipates the need will be
greater than the new facility’s exam rooms will be able to accommodate.
“If
you think about serving those [6000] patients, the four exam rooms that
we have at Randolph High School — even if we use them every day for the
full day — would never meet the demand that we believe is there,” Fish
said.
He pointed to
the oftquoted line from the movie “Jaws,” which turned 50 this year: “So
the saying goes, ‘we need a bigger boat,’” Fish said. “That’s what
we’re planning next.”