| NPI | Name | Type | Address |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Alyssa Kelvington |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Alicia Meyers |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Carlos Mier |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St. San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Suzan Jane Foley |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Kathy Gordon-swan |
Individual |
52 Dore St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Wen Jie Zhang |
Individual |
1001 Potrero Ave Bldg 5 San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Kagnavy Sim |
Individual |
1001 Potrero Ave San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Daisy Alejandra Rangel |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Benny Dao |
Individual |
1038 Post St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Nasari Medina Woolfolk |
Individual |
212 Ashbury St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Shakira Watson |
Individual |
52 Dore St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Sharon Lew |
Individual |
368 Fell St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Francese Soto |
Individual |
56 Julian Ave San Francisco, CA |
|
|
MR. M0801152124 Roland Miller |
Individual |
1735 Mission St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Erick Romero |
Individual |
1801 Vicente St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Clery Villacrez |
Individual |
2919 Mission St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
N/A Christopher Waldschmitt |
Individual |
1735 Mission St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Cassandra Kaye Cleland |
Individual |
368 Fell St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
MR. Kael Alaimo |
Individual |
1930 Market St San Francisco, CA |
|
|
Laura Douglass Decarava |
Individual |
1801 Vincente St San Francisco, CA |
Every health care provider, whether it’s a hospital, pharmacy, or individual specialist, must obtain their own NPI number. This identification number is unique and is assigned upon application. In tod...
| Taxonomy Code | 172V00000X |
| Display Name | Community Health Worker |
| Taxonomy Group | Other Service Providers |
| Taxonomy Classification | Community Health Worker |
| Definition | Community health workers (CHW) are lay members of communities who work either for pay or as volunteers in association with the local health care system in both urban and rural environments and usually share ethnicity, language, socioeconomic status and life experiences with the community members they serve. They have been identified by many titles such as community health advisors, lay health advocates, "promotores(as), outreach educators, community health representatives, peer health promoters, and peer health educators. CHWs offer interpretation and translation services, provide culturally appropriate health education and information, assist people in receiving the care they need, give informal counseling and guidance on health behaviors, advocate for individual and community health needs, and provide some direct services such as first aid and blood pressure screening. Some examples of these practitioners are Community Health Aides or Practitioners established under 25 USC 1616 (l) under HHS, Indian Health Service, Public Health Service. |
| Effective Date | September 30, 2009 |