Another medical clinic coming to Sequim

SEQUIM — Sit down with this woman, and you’ll feel like telling her everything.

That’s the first thing that’s clear: Bridgett Bell Kraft is a listener.

Then she breaks the news about what’s next for her and for this city.

Kraft plans to open Primary Care Sequim, a 3,400-square-foot combination urgent care and primary care clinic, at 520 N. Fifth Ave. in October.

At first the walk-in center will be open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays through Tuesdays. It will close on Wednesdays and Thursdays the least-busy days for a health clinic, Kraft said during its first three months. Then, around the beginning of the new year, Primary Care Sequim will be open seven days a week.

The combination clinic will be the first of its kind in Sequim.

Port Angeles’ Clinicare, 16 miles away, is the closest walk-in clinic.

Kraft, a nurse practitioner with 30 years of experience in clinics and hospitals from Seattle to Saudi Arabia, is in the process of hiring six other nurse practitioners who will co-own and operate the facility.

Primary Care Sequim will be on insurance carriers’ provider lists, Kraft said.

“This will relieve some of the burden for other practitioners,” across the Dungeness Valley, she said.

“I don’t see myself as being in competition with other providers. My clinic will be just another option.”

Like primary care doctors, nurse practitioners make referrals to specialists.

“We’re fortunate in this area to have a wealth of physicians to refer to,” Kraft said.

Other options

Last month the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe announced plans to open a 35,000-square-foot health clinic on the Olympic Medical Cancer Center campus, also on Fifth Avenue in Sequim.

It will open to the general public as well as to tribal members around the end of 2007, with 15 to 18 family doctors, specialists and nurse practitioners on its staff, but the tribe’s clinic won’t have an urgent care center.

Sequim’s Olympic Medical Park, as it’s now called, doesn’t include a walk-in clinic in its first phase either, said spokeswoman Bobby Beeman.

“We will soon begin planning the next phases, and we will seek input from the Sequim community,” she said, adding that the medical center “recognizes there will be a growing need for primary care in Sequim.”

To Kraft’s mind, the need is here now

More in News

Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his 1968 Cessna Aerobat, named Scarlett, at the Jefferson County International Airport in Port Townsend. Lundahl was picking up his plane Wednesday from Tailspin Tommy’s Aircraft Repair facility located at the airport. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fueling up

Fred Lundahl, a pilot from Whidbey Island, prepares to fuel up his… Continue reading

After hours pet clinic set for Peninsula

Opening June 6 at Sequim location

Five to be honored with community service awards

Ceremony set Thursday at Port Angeles Senior Community Center

PASD planning for expanding needs

Special education, homelessness, new facilities under discussion

Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Animal Control Deputy Ed Bauck
Clallam Sheriff appoints animal control deputy

Position was vacant since end of 2024

Highway 104 road work to start week

Maintenance crews will repair road surfaces on state Highway… Continue reading

Supreme Court says no to recall reconsider

Sequim man found liable for legal fees

Chimacum Ridge seeks board members

Members to write policy, balance values, chair says

Fire destroys shop east of Port Angeles

A fire on Hickory Street east of Port Angeles… Continue reading

Jefferson Transit Authority to expand Kingston Express route

Jefferson Transit Authority has announced expanded service on its… Continue reading

From left to right, Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding students Krystol Pasecznyk and Scott McNair sand a Prothero Sloop with Sean Koomen, the school’s boat building program director. Koomen said the sanding would take one person a few days. He said the plan is to have 12 people sand it together, which will take a few hours. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Wooden boatbuilding school building ‘Twin Boats’

Students using traditional and cold-moulding construction techniques