• Ir al contenido principal
Español de México
Español de México English العربية 简体中文 ဗမာစာ नेपाली فارسی Tiếng Việt
Inicio de sesión en MyChart

Central Health

Distrito Hospitalario del Condado de Travis

  • Para los miembros del MAP
  • Para proveedores
  • Consejo de Administración y reuniones
  • Contáctate con nosotros
  • Carreras profesionales
Español de México
Español de México English العربية 简体中文 ဗမာစာ नेपाली فارسی Tiếng Việt
Central Health Home Icon
Search Icon
  • Inicio de sesión en MyChart
  • Obtener atención médica
    • RECIBIR ATENCION MEDICA

    • OBTENER SERVICIOS DE SALUD

      • Servicios clínicos
      • Ubicaciones
      • Proveedores de servicios de Central Health
      • Programas de salud y bienestar
      • Registros Médicos del Paciente
      • CommUnityCare Health Centers (enlace externo)
    • OBTENER COBERTURA

      • Programas de cobertura de Central Health (MAP)
      • Sendero Health Plans (enlace externo)
      • Información del Mercado de Seguros Médicos
    • PERMANECER CUBIERTO

      • Renovación de Membresía MAP
      • Documentos que necesitarás
  • Acerca de nosotros
    • SOBRE NOSOTROS

      • Acerca de nosotros
      • Ubicaciones
      • Cultura
      • Plan Estratégico de Central Health
      • Consejo de Administración
      • Liderazgo ejecutivo
      • Finanzas, presupuesto e impuestos
      • Haz negocios con nosotros
      • Informe Anual del Año Fiscal 2025
  • Involúcrate
    • PARTICIPA

      • Involúcrate
      • Participa: Presupuesto del Año Fiscal 2027
      • Campeones comunitarios de la salud
      • Consejo de Política de Equidad en la Salud
      • Asóciate con nosotros
  • Noticias
    • SALA DE PRENSA

      • Sala de Prensa
      • Informe demográfico 2024
      • Biblioteca de documentos
      • Archivo de comunicados de prensa
  • Para los miembros del MAP
  • Para proveedores
  • Empleo y cultura
  • Póngase en contacto con
Inicio > Noticias > Destacados > Cooking Up a New Chapter

Cocinando un nuevo capítulo

10 de julio de 2026

How Central Health helped Kafaren Fairly reclaim her health, home, and passion for food

Kafaren Fairly believes in the power of food.

“It’s my passion,” she says.

As a lifelong cook from Mississippi, her culinary background has taken her to countless kitchens in the South, where she’s fed thousands of people. Shrimp dishes, chicken and beef entrees, even homemade mac-and-cheese. Anything you can think of, she’s created it.

But her specialty is sauteed vegetables. When she’s at home and her creativity is flowing, she’ll splash a bit of lemon pepper and paprika on zucchini, squash, cabbage, or peas.

“That’s my little concoction,” she says.

Kafaren delivers food, she says, to bring love into the world.

Kafaren in kitchen

But a year ago, after moving to Austin and then spending a brief stint out on the streets on her own, she faced a challenge well beyond the kitchen.

Dealing with Chronic Issues

When Kafaren, 60, arrived in Austin last June, her health was deteriorating. She had an unstable foot, Type 2 diabetes, and diabetic retinopathy. Notably, she was experiencing eye floaters, which are small specks of cloudy material that impact vision, and had cataracts in both eyes.

She had spent all her life in Biloxi, Mississippi with Kevin, her husband of 39 years, and their children. It was Thanksgiving a few years ago with the family when she broke her ankle, prompting surgery and a few screws jutted into the bone. Years later, it made her shaky.

Now in Austin, Kafaren knew she needed help. Mere days into her tenure as a resident of Travis County, she called 2-1-1, a free social service hotline for non-emergencies, and was advised to visit the Sunrise Communities Homeless Navigation Center. A short time later, she enrolled in MAP (the Medical Access Program), a coverage option by Central Health for Travis County residents with low income.

By August, Kafaren’s need for health care outweighed the services she had been given. It prompted her to make the hardest decision of her life: entering the Eighth Street Shelter, a facility for unhoused women and transgender people living in Austin.

“Everyone was so hurt by me making that choice,” she said, “but I had to do that to get to where I am now.”

CommUnityCare Health Centers, Central Health’s ambulatory care partner and a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), utilizes a street medicine team to provide care to people in need at places like campsites, the Austin Resource Center for the Homeless (ARCH), the Marshalling Yard, and the Eighth Street Shelter. There’s also the Central Health Bridge Team, which is dedicated to helping Travis County people who are unhoused. The Central Health system works together to provide wraparound care, which includes social and other support services.

At the time, Kafaren was using a cane to walk.

“She had a complicated personal and social situation that led to homelessness and was staying at 8th street,” said Dr. Feba Thomas, who directed Kafaren’s care and is also Central Health’s Director of Informatics.

Kafaren

Kafaren on apartment balcony

Making Changes

Before Dr. Thomas did a single thing, she looked at Kafaren and asked her a question.

“What are your priorities?”

“I think when you’re unhoused, you don’t have autonomy,” Dr. Thomas said. “Society and different people tell you to do X, Y, and Z to get your needs met. You can’t sit down. You can’t camp. You can’t go to the bathroom. For me, respecting people and treating them like humans with autonomy is important.”

It was a question Kafaren did not consider initially, either. What were her priorities? For years, visits to the doctor weren’t enjoyable. They felt empty, as if she wasn’t being seen or heard. In Mississippi, where she held insurance coverage through the health insurance marketplace, she said she was cast aside, unable to make routine appointments.

Maybe all of this was a reason for her depression. But in an instant, that all changed. The past seemed so far in the rearview.

Inside the exam room, Dr. Thomas treated Kafaren’s knee to reduce inflammation and pain.

Within days, the ball began to roll.

First came appointments with behavioral health providers, and a referral to Integral Care. Next came cataract surgery to improve Kafaren’s vision. More referrals followed, forwarding her to specialists that could help her eyes and feet.

There were appointments at the Capital Plaza Specialty Clinic’s bridge clinic and the Central Health East Austin Specialty Clinic, as well as health care pitstops at the ARCH to receive primary care through CommUnityCare Health Centers providers.

All this health care was covered under MAP.

“She saved my life,” Kafaren said of Dr. Thomas.

Moving Forward

When Kafaren was on the road toward better health, she found a job through The University of Texas as a cook for Jester City Limits, a university housing and dining hall.

And that passion for food? It bubbled back to the surface.

“I’ve been a cook all my life,” she said.

Eventually, Kafaren found permanent footing elsewhere, too.

At the start of the new year, she met with a Central Health case manager to complete a Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) application. After being approved in February, she found housing in March.

By June, Kafaren was comfortably moved into a one-bedroom apartment. Outside her place sat two lawn chairs and a few plants. Inside was a futon and a television. A Bible laid neatly on an ottoman. Kafaren’s biggest point of pride, though? Her refrigerator.

Inside the door revealed orderly stacks of food and drink.

Just the other night, she made “Wemby-tizers,” chicken and vegetable kabobs named after San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama.

“I don’t want to get off track,” she said of the Spurs, who lost in the NBA Finals to the New York Knicks, 4-1, “but I’m hurt (by the Spurs).”

The basketball score notwithstanding, Kafaren was in good spirits.

She’s healthy, happy, and ready to cook again.

“Austin is my home now,” she said.

white logo
Facebook Social icon (opens in a new window) Twitter Social icon (opens in a new window) Instagram Social icon (opens in a new window) YouTube Social icon (opens in a new window)

Aviso: El Distrito de Salud del Condado de Travis, que opera bajo el nombre comercial Central Health, ha adoptado una tasa impositiva que aumentará los impuestos para mantenimiento y operaciones con respecto a la tasa impositiva del año pasado. La tasa impositiva se incrementará efectivamente en un 8 % y aumentará los impuestos para mantenimiento y operaciones de una vivienda de $100,000 en aproximadamente $8.41 (ocho dólares con cuarenta y un centavos).

Estamos aquí para ayudar:

MAP y MAP Basic
512.978.8130
CommUnityCare
512.978.9015
Sendero Health Plans
844.800.4693

1111 East Cesar Chavez St.
Austin, TX 78702
512.978.8000

Copyright © 2026 Central Health. Todos los derechos reservados.

Únete a nuestro equipo

Presentar una solicitud de información pública

Política de privacidad

Derechos y responsabilidades del paciente

Central Health Servicios Comentarios

Oportunidades educativas

Central Health Investigación

Tablón de anuncios del Consejo de Administración

Aviso: El Distrito de Salud del Condado de Travis d/b/a Central Health adoptó una tasa impositiva que recaudará más impuestos para mantenimiento y operaciones que la tasa impositiva del año pasado. La tasa de impuestos será aumentada efectivamente por 8 por ciento y aumentará los impuestos para mantenimiento y operaciones en una casa de $100,000 por aproximadamente $8.41(ocho dólares y cuarenta y un centavos).

Copyright © 2026 Central Health. Todos los derechos reservados.