© 2025 WMRA and WEMC
NPR News & NPR Talk in Central Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Augusta Medical Group closing three clinics

The urgent care clinic in Weyers Cave is one of three facilities Augusta Medical Group is closing this year.
Google Maps
The urgent care clinic in Weyers Cave is one of three facilities Augusta Medical Group is closing this year.

Difficulty recruiting medical professionals and the forecasted impacts of the Trump administration's healthcare funding cuts have led Augusta Medical Group to close three facilities. WMRA's Randi B. Hagi reports.

Augusta Medical Group is the network of primary care and urgent care clinics in the Augusta Health system. The organization announced last week that it will be closing three locations in response to both existing pressures and the anticipated impacts of Medicaid cuts and other changes in federal funding.

Buena Vista Primary Care stopped seeing patients on Monday. They're being transferred to the health system's Maury River and Lexington practices. Churchville Primary Care will move all of their patients to the Verona practice in October. And the Weyers Cave Urgent Care has been functionally closed since May –

Cecelia Carpenter is the chief operating officer of Augusta Medical Group.
Augusta Medical Group
Cecelia Carpenter is the chief operating officer of Augusta Medical Group.

CECELIA CARPENTER: Because we haven't had providers to staff it.

Cecelia Carpenter is the chief operating officer of Augusta Medical Group.

CARPENTER: Nationally, and in the state of Virginia, there is a shortage of physicians and advanced practice providers. … This also can be a difficult place to recruit folks to, if they don't necessarily have ties to the community. … But the other piece of it is, we're really looking ahead, monitoring the impacts of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, and understanding that we're going to have to provide healthcare differently in the future than we have in the past. … These three locations all have populations that are either decreasing or fairly stagnant and are not projected to grow, and they also have fairly small populations.

The health system has begun deploying its new mobile clinic to Weyers Cave.

CARPENTER: Augusta Health remains committed to taking care of our community. That's our mission. That's always going to be our mission, and we're just evaluating how we can … achieve that mission in different ways.

Carpenter said all staff at the three closing clinics are being reassigned to other locations within the health system.

Full disclosure: Augusta Health underwrites programming on WMRA.

Randi B. Hagi first joined the WMRA team in 2019 as a freelance reporter. Her work has been featured on NPR and other NPR member stations; in The Harrisonburg Citizen, where she previously served as the assistant editor;The Mennonite; Mennonite World Review; and Eastern Mennonite University's Crossroads magazine.
Related Content
  • The budget legislation that President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4th cuts federal health spending by around $1 trillion over the next decade, as NPR previously reported. WMRA's Randi B. Hagi brings us the first of a two-part report about how local hospitals are bracing for the funding challenges ahead.
  • The tax and spending legislation that President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4th cuts federal health spending by around $1 trillion over the next decade, as NPR previously reported. WMRA's Randi B. Hagi brings us the second of a two-part report about how local hospitals are bracing for the funding challenges ahead.
  • Patients are now able to get primary care services through Augusta Health’s new traveling clinic. It was made possible with lots of support from community donors. WMRA’s Ayse Pirge reports.