Alexander E. Jacobs

The Tufts-Delta Health Center and the Limits of Maximum Feasible Participation, 1965–1970

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Posted:
Thu, December 18, 2025

Founded in 1965 during the War on Poverty, the Community Health Center (CHC) program was created to meet the health needs of poor Americans while employing patients in clinic oversight and operations. This study explores the historical roots and implications of community participation in health care. The paper focuses on the foundational years of the CHC program, with attention to the establishment of the Tufts-Delta Health Center (TDHC) in Mound Bayou, Mississippi, and the struggles to realize community control in a clinical context. The analysis reveals the tensions between outsider activists, local elites, and impoverished community members over CHC governance, reflecting broader conflicts over community participation in health care. By scrutinizing the practical and ideological conflicts at TDHC, this essay illuminates the promises and limitations of federal grassroots health initiatives and underscores the complexities of genuine patient authority in health care delivery.