Mission
Carl Vogel Center (CVC) is a nonprofit community-based
organization that provides multidisciplinary and integrated medical healthcare
that embodies all aspects of a person's physical, mental, and emotional
well-being. CVC helps medically underserved individuals to become full
partners and informed advocates in managing their health.
Values
Call
to serve: First and foremost, all our actions must benefit medically
underserved individuals, especially those with AIDS.
Commitment
to excellence: meet the highest quality standards in everything
the organization does.
Support
individuals to live a healthy lifestyle: help clients understand
all their options and educate them to advocate for themselves.
Safe
place: create and maintain a safe environment, a place that is
private, where clients feel welcomed, comfortable with the services and
the environment in which they are provided.
Responsiveness
to emerging community needs: maintain a close connection
to the community; use partnerships to be responsive to community needs.
Advocacy: advocate for clients and teach/support people to advocate
for themselves; engage in both client-level and policy-related advocacy.
Culturally
competent treatment: To appropriately serve all members of
our community we are committed to being responsive to, and respectful
of the various cultural and linguistic needs of our clients, clinical
staff and administrative volunteers.
History
The
late Don Vogel, founder and first president of Carl Vogel Center,
began the organization
in 1990 in memory of his son, Carl, who died of
AIDS in January 1989. The Center enjoys the continuing support of Carl’s
brother and sister, Mark and Paula Vogel. Paula Vogel is a playwright
who won the off-Broadway theatrical award, the OBIE, for her play The
Baltimore Waltz. The play is about Paula taking an imaginary trip around
Europe with her brother, Carl, before his death from AIDS.