
The clinics formerly owned by Providence will reopen to patients on Jan. 13, 2025, under the PeaceHealth name
VANCOUVER – The transition of four former Providence-owned clinic sites to PeaceHealth in Clark County is nearly complete with plans to reopen to patients under the PeaceHealth name on Jan. 13, 2025.
Nearly all the staff from the clinics’ around 100 physicians, clinicians and caregivers – chose to stay at their clinics and join the PeaceHealth family.
“We want current clinic patients to know that while the names of the clinics are changing, their care team who they know, and trust, remains the same,†shares Leon McCook, MD, Chief Medical Officer, PeaceHealth Medical Group-Columbia Network.â€
Across the four sites, services at the clinics will include primary care, walk-in care, imaging, and outpatient rehabilitation services. Their names and locations will be:
- PeaceHealth Esther Short Primary Clinic, 700 Washington Street
- PeaceHealth Camas Clinic, 3101 SE 192nd Ave
- Primary Care
- Outpatient Rehabilitation
- PeaceHealth Mill Plain Clinic, 315 SE Stone Mill Dr.
- Primary Care
- Priority Care
- PeaceHealth Vancouver Rehabilitation Clinic, 222 Park Plaza Dr., Park Tower 3, Ste. 120
By transitioning these outpatient care sites to PeaceHealth, patients in Clark County will gain increased access to a full spectrum of primary, specialty and hospital care services closer to home, without having to travel into Oregon.
“Caring for all is at the heart of the PeaceHealth Mission,†adds Dr. McCook. “We are grateful for this opportunity to welcome the talented care team of these clinics and further improve access and health outcomes in the region.â€
For more information on the clinics, visit www.peacehealth.org/clarkcounty.
About PeaceHealth
PeaceHealth, based in Vancouver, Wash., is a not-for-profit Catholic health system offering care to communities in Washington, Oregon and Alaska. PeaceHealth has approximately 16,000 caregivers, a group practice with more than 1,200 clinicians and 9 medical centers serving both urban and rural communities throughout the Northwest. In 1890, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace founded what has become PeaceHealth. The Sisters shared expertise and transferred wisdom from one medical center to another, always finding the best way to serve the unmet need for healthcare in their communities. Today, PeaceHealth is the legacy of the founding Sisters and continues with a spirit of respect, stewardship, collaboration and social justice in fulfilling its Mission. Visit us online at peacehealth.org.
Also read:
- Ridgefield School District to host multi-agency emergency preparedness exerciseMulti-agency exercise at Ridgefield High School will simulate environmental hazard scenario on Friday.
- Top talent headlining concerts announced with music ticket sales opening for the 2026 Clark County FairGRAMMY-nominated Midland, I Love The ’90s Tour, and Collective Soul headline the 2026 Clark County Fair concert series.
- Opinion: Cowards in black robesJudge refuses emergency protection for constitutional sheriffs facing removal by unelected board.
- Battle Ground Public Schools plant sales set to beginHigh school students grow annuals, perennials, and native plants for three upcoming community sales in April and May.
- Opinion: Internal emails show income tax bill was designed to bypass the Constitution and lock out votersInternal communications show legislators and AG’s office strategically designed income tax bill to prevent public referendum while forcing Supreme Court review.
- GiveBig is coming Tuesday, May 5Vancouver cat rescue seeks $10,000 during one-day online fundraising challenge to cover extraordinary medical expenses.
- Letter: HB 2266 and fairness for Clark County communitiesVancouver resident argues the housing bill expands placement options while limiting local government oversight of siting decisions.








