On a Monday evening on the fourth floor of Helmsley Medical Tower, a Weill Cornell Medicine medical student leans in to take a patient’s history—in Spanish, English or sometimes both—before stepping out to present the case to an attending physician. Months later, that same student may be messaging that patient about lab results, helping schedule a specialist visit or urging them to go to the emergency room if needed.
At the Weill Cornell Community Clinic (WCCC), this scenario isn’t the exception—it’s the model. Over the last two decades, the student-founded clinic has become a bedrock of care for uninsured New Yorkers while also evolving into a deeply embedded part of medical education at Weill Cornell Medical College. Staffed by volunteer physicians but largely run by medical students themselves, the WCCC serves about 120 patients each year, many of whom return regularly for primary care, chronic disease management and mental health services.
As it marks its 20th anniversary, WCCC leaders say the clinic’s greatest strengths—student-driven innovation and a growing set of institutional partnerships—are cause for celebration, even as they worry about sustaining vital support.