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← Back to 2018

To love is to heal

by Crystal Vander Weit
Carmela Fletcher-Green, 50, smiles at Marie Reynolds, 96, as she gives her a monthly check-up at Windsor Care Nursing Home. Carmela, who has worked at Mt. Sterling Clinic for nine years, has been a physician assistant for 21 years. "I have true passion for my nursing home patients," Carmela says. "They have some of the greatest emotional, spiritual, and healthcare needs at the end of life."

“I feel comfortable with her,” says Deanna Conn, a resident of Owingsville. “When I see her it’s like seeing family and catching up.”

For seven years, Deanna has regularly visited physician assistant Carmela Fletcher-Green at Mt. Sterling Clinic. Carmela, 50, has been a PA for 21 years, nine of them in Mt. Sterling. She also sees patients at Windsor Care Nursing Home and the Post Clinic, a clinic that serves the uninsured and underinsured population in the area.

Her motto? “Keep patients healthy–one at a time.”

During office visits, Carmela gives patients her undivided attention. She often gives them her personal phone number so they can get answers when they need them. “It is so satisfying to know that you helped someone feel good about themselves,” she says.

Carmela’s dedication to medicine began in childhood. In high school, she volunteered 3,000 hours at Mary Chiles Hospital, now St. Joseph Mt. Sterling. Determined and with help from her community and high school, she earned a degree in biology and an additional Bachelor’s in physician assistant studies at University of Kentucky. “Choosing to be a PA has been a blessing to me,” she says.

A divorced parent of two daughters, Carmela advocates for all children, especially low-income children and those with disabilities. Her parents were factory workers in Mt. Sterling, where her family has lived for six generations. “We didn’t have a lot of money,” Carmela says. She credits the community with supporting her in school and beyond. “I want to see all children succeed to the best of their ability,” she says.

Carmela says she tells her daughters not to sit at the back of the classroom. “Always sit at the front because we didn’t always have the opportunity to do so,” she says.

The first African-American to sit on the Montgomery County Board of Education, Carmela also serves as the director of the Montgomery County 4-H youth leadership program, This Land is our Land.

Though her specific role in the community may change, Carmela is committed to continuing her service. ” I love what I do,” she says. “I know this is exactly what God called me to do.”

Carmela's stethoscope wraps around her pearl necklace as she treats a patient at the Post Clinic, a facility that serves the uninsured and underinsured. She volunteers her time once a week at the clinic. The pearls were a Christmas gift from a fellow volunteer from the clinic, Jim Johnson. "He reminds me on a regular basis that I'm beautiful on the inside and out," says Carmela. "My pearls are a daily reminder to use my inner beauty to bless others."
Carmela checks her patient, Zella Schooler, 100, as beautician B.J. Linville puts the final touches on Zella's hairdo at Windsor Care Nursing Home.
Carmela joins Briley Allen, 10, as they rehearse moves for the upcoming Zombie Walk at the DuBois Community Center. The Center is the former gym of the African-American high school and the only building remaining after the school burned down due to arson in 1964. Carmela served as the vice president of the DuBois revitalization project.
Carmela holds her 8-year-old dachshund, River, in her home on Missionary Lane.
A Fletcher family photo stands atop a chest in Carmela's parents' bedroom. The photograph shows, from left, brother Dwayne Fletcher, mother Vaniessa Fletcher, Carmela Fletcher-Green, brother Darrell Garrett and father Clyde Fletcher Jr.
Carmela gently strokes the head of her mother, Vaniessa Fletcher, 70. Vaniessa suffers from COPD, renal failure and congestive heart failure. "My mom is a trooper," says Carmela. "She refuses to give up."
Carmela relaxes and jokes with her father, Clyde Fletcher Jr., 79, in her childhood home on Willow Street. "My father instilled in me the importance of love, patience, kindness, honesty, integrity and always striving to be of good character," Carmela says.
Carmela falls asleep in her parents' living room on a crocheted blanket her mother made. After busy days of seeing patients and going to school board meetings, foundation meetings or club meetings, she often visits her parents for dinner. "This is my spot," says Carmela. "As soon as I sit down, it doesn't take long for me to fall asleep."

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