Healthcare

Oasis Free Clinics expands care, serves hundreds in Sagadahoc County

Oasis Free Clinics released a year end reflection on December 8 reporting expanded patient care and deeper community partnerships in 2025. The report documents nearly 2,000 medical visits, about 1,000 prescriptions filled, and program growth that will affect uninsured adults across the Midcoast region.

Dr. Elena Rodriguez2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Oasis Free Clinics expands care, serves hundreds in Sagadahoc County
Source: oasisfreeclinics.org

Oasis Free Clinics, which serves Brunswick and Sagadahoc County, published a year end reflection on December 8 detailing an expanded slate of services and strengthened local partnerships during 2025. The clinic said it saw roughly 440 distinct patients this year, delivered nearly 2,000 medical visits, and filled about 1,000 prescriptions through its onsite pharmacy while opening its doors for 247 days.

The report, authored by Anita Ruff, credited a substantial volunteer corps with sustaining clinic operations. Volunteers contributed several hundred hours across the year, enabling regular clinic days and supporting the onsite pharmacy and care coordination. Community fundraising events and volunteer contributions also underpinned the clinic's capacity to offer no cost services to uninsured adults in the Midcoast region.

Oasis described closer collaboration with health and social service organizations as a key development in 2025. The clinic deepened partnerships with Mid Coast Hospital and local groups including The Gathering Place, Mid Coast Hunger Prevention Program, and Tedford Housing. Those relationships supported referrals, wraparound services, and efforts to address social drivers of health that affect patients in Sagadahoc County.

Education and workforce links also expanded, with training and teaching connections reported with Bowdoin College and other institutions. The clinic framed these ties as part of a strategy to broaden its clinical workforce pipeline and to integrate students and trainees into community based care models.

AI-generated illustration

Looking ahead, Oasis previewed program growth for 2026. Planned expansions include enhanced dental services and an enlarged blood pressure monitoring program, along with continued recruitment of staff and volunteers to maintain service levels. For residents who rely on the clinic, those changes could mean improved access to preventive care, chronic disease monitoring, and dental treatment that many local uninsured adults currently lack.

The year end reflection places Oasis Free Clinics at the center of a community network that combines medical care, social services, education, and fundraising. The result is sustained no cost primary care for district residents who otherwise face significant barriers to health care access.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Discussion

More in Healthcare