Statewide association supporting Vermont and New Hampshire community health centers with training, advocacy, and policy work. Fathers looking for a sliding-scale primary care home can use the Bi-State website to find federally qualified health centers across Vermont. The Montpelier office provides directories and general information. Calls to member health centers directly will start new-patient intake for families.
Healthcare for fathers without insurance is accessible through Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs — also called community health centers), free clinics, hospital financial assistance programs, and Medicaid. FQHCs exist in every state and charge on a sliding scale; they provide primary care, dental, behavioral health, and prescription services. The HRSA health center locator lists all FQHCs. Free clinics (typically run by volunteer medical professionals) operate in most major cities. Medicaid eligibility expanded to adults without dependent children in states that adopted Medicaid expansion under the ACA — eligibility is generally up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level. For uninsured emergencies, every hospital must stabilize regardless of ability to pay under EMTALA, and all nonprofit hospitals are required to offer financial assistance for qualifying patients. This directory includes FQHCs, free clinics, state Medicaid offices, and state ACA marketplaces.
Healthcare in Vermont
Vermont's Family Division of the Superior Court handles all family matters statewide. The Office of Child Support Services operates under DCF. Burlington, South Burlington, Rutland, and Essex are the largest towns. Vermont Legal Aid and Legal Services Vermont (a nonprofit partner) provide civil legal aid, including a joint statewide Family Law helpline.
More Healthcare in Vermont
Vermont Medicaid (Green Mountain Care) — State Medicaid program providing free or low-cost health coverage to low-income Vermont families including parents, children, pregnant women
Dr. Dynasaur (Vermont CHIP) — Vermont's Children's Health Insurance Program provides free or low-cost coverage to children up to age 18 and pregnant women in households u
Community Health Centers of Burlington — Federally qualified health center providing affordable primary care, dental, pharmacy, behavioral health, and women's health services on a s
Vermont Health Connect — State health insurance marketplace for Vermonters to compare and enroll in qualified health plans and apply for Medicaid, Dr. Dynasaur, and
UVM Medical Center — Vermont's largest hospital and academic medical center offering comprehensive primary, specialty, and emergency care on Colchester Ave in Bu
Northern Counties Health Care — Federally qualified community health center serving the rural Northeast Kingdom with primary care, dental, behavioral health, and pharmacy s
Healthcare — Common Questions
I don't have insurance — where do I go for primary care?
A Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) — every state has them, they charge on sliding-scale based on income, and they cover primary care, dental, mental health, and often pharmacy. Find one at findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov.
Do I qualify for Medicaid as a single dad?
In Medicaid expansion states, any adult with income up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level qualifies regardless of dependents. In non-expansion states, a custodial parent of a minor may qualify under lower thresholds. Apply at your state's Medicaid agency or through healthcare.gov.
What about an emergency with no insurance?
EMTALA requires every US hospital with an ER to stabilize any emergency regardless of ability to pay. Nonprofit hospitals must offer financial assistance (often free care up to 200% FPL). Never skip a real emergency over cost — ask about charity care when you arrive.
Is there help with prescriptions?
Patient assistance programs from drug manufacturers provide free or low-cost meds for uninsured patients. NeedyMeds and RxAssist list them. GoodRx and SingleCare provide discount pricing for uninsured buyers. FQHCs often include 340B pharmacy discounts on-site.