44 organizations
We are still writing the honest guide for this category. In the meantime, the organizations below are ready to help.
The Asa G. Yancey Health Center is a Grady Health System neighborhood clinic on Atlanta's Westside. It provides primary care for all ages, women's and pregnancy care, pediatrics, behavioral health, HIV care, and on-site lab and pharmacy services. Grady offers financial assistance for low-income, uninsured Fulton and DeKalb County residents.
8 services
Georgia Charitable Care Network is a statewide group that supports more than 100 free and low-cost health clinics across Georgia. They are not a clinic themselves, but they can help you find a free or charitable clinic near you, and they run a program that helps low-income Georgians get hearing aids at a reduced cost.
4 services
St. Vincent de Paul Georgia runs a free, fully licensed charitable pharmacy for people who can't afford their medicine. If you live in Georgia, are 18 or older, have no insurance, and have a low income, they give you maintenance medications for things like diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma, and mental health conditions at no cost. They can deliver your medicine for free nearby or mail it anywhere in Georgia, and they also help with Medicaid sign-up, free over-the-counter medicine, and medical equipment.
7 services
This is the main VA medical center for veterans in the Atlanta area, officially named the Joseph Maxwell Cleland Atlanta VA Medical Center in Decatur. It provides free or low-cost health care to enrolled veterans, including doctor visits, mental health and PTSD care, surgery, emergency care, pharmacy, dental, and women's health. The emergency room is open 24 hours a day, and the center also connects veterans to crisis help and community care.
9 services