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Nansemond Indian Nation prepares to open second clinic with more in the works

Pharmacist James Mitchell counts out pills at Fishing Point Pharmacy in Southeast Newport News. Mitchell ran Southeast Community Pharmacy, which Fishing Point acquired and will fold into its new clinic.
Photo by Ryan Murphy
Pharmacist James Mitchell counts out pills at Fishing Point Pharmacy in Southeast Newport News. Mitchell ran Southeast Community Pharmacy, which Fishing Point acquired and will fold into its new clinic.

Fishing Point Healthcare provides tribal members and non-natives with primary care, physical therapy, dental and pharmacy services.

The Nansemond Indian Nation will open its second medical clinic in Newport News March 1.

It’s the latest in a fast-moving plan to expand the tribe’s medical footprint to vulnerable communities across the region, and there are more clinic locations on the horizon.

The tribe started building Fishing Point Healthcare in 2023, made possible by the Nansemond Nation’s federal recognition five years earlier.

That recognition allows the tribe to look after the health of its own members and serve those receiving federal healthcare assistance like Medicaid.

Lance Johnson is Fishing Point’s CEO, a member of a tribe in the Western United States who has a decade of experience running tribal healthcare operations.

Johnson said Native Americans across the nation suffer from higher rates of poverty and worse health outcomes than average, a pattern not too different from many pockets of Hampton Roads.

A lack of accessible healthcare in the largely Black community of Southeast Newport News has left residents there with life expectancies a decade shorter than the state average. More than a quarter in the area live below the poverty line and the community is a stone’s throw from a coal terminal that often carpets the area – and residents’ lungs – in a fine layer of coal dust that many say causes them chronic respiratory problems.

“That’s really what we're trying to provide is a high quality of care to an underserved population, including those who are non-native,” Johnson said.

Fishing Point opened its first clinic a year ago in Portsmouth. It also operates an in-home health service and runs a 20-bed alcohol and substance abuse facility and a standalone behavioral health facility, both in Chesapeake.

The group has already taken over a community pharmacy in Newport News and will open a small primary care office near City Center at Oyster Point on March 1. That will serve as a temporary office in the city while Fishing Point builds out a 17,000 square-foot clinic at 25th Street and Jefferson Avenue.

That will open in phases starting this fall, just like the Portsmouth clinic did. It’ll provide all the same services as that first clinic — a one-stop shop for doctor and dentist appointments with an in-house pharmacy, physical therapy and a radiology department even more expansive than what’s available at the Portsmouth location.

Once the full clinic opens, Fishing Point plans to turn the Thimble Shoals office into some kind of specialty health care office, but they’re still working out those details.

Money made by the business venture is meant to provide for the health of the tribe – which currently means reinvesting profits to grow Fishing Point to provide even more medical access.

the expansions will keep coming, Johnson said.

Fishing Point has already bought a building on Church Street in Norfolk and will be opening a small clinic there in June. That Norfolk location will eventually offer outpatient surgeries like knee scoping, likely sometime in 2026.

The tribe also has plans for clinics in Chesapeake, Virginia Beach, Williamsburg and Suffolk, where the Nansemond Nation is headquartered.

“Obviously, those plans are years and years away, but we do want to continue to expand and bring this quality health care to everybody who is needing it,” Johnson said.

Ryan is WHRO’s business and growth reporter. He joined the newsroom in 2021 after eight years at local newspapers, the Daily Press and Virginian-Pilot. Ryan is a Chesapeake native and still tries to hold his breath every time he drives through the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel.

The best way to reach Ryan is by emailing ryan.murphy@whro.org.

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