Mt. Sin Central Clinic

Mt. Sin Central Clinic, also known as Mt. Sin Central Hospital, is a location featured $$

Pre-War
Opened on April 23, 2077, Matthew Sinclair Memorial Central Hospital was named after founder Armand Sinclair's son, Matthew Sinclair, who passed away after an ambulance refused service over not having the right insurance. Not wanting other parents to suffer through his experience, Armand made it the hospital's goal to provide affordable healthcare for everyone, requiring no credit checks, down payments or insurance. If patients lacked the necessary money, they received care free of charge.

On the day of its opening, federal agents began investigating the hospital for suspected communist activity, requesting full access to untampered hospital employment records. Armand Sinclair's office was ground zero for the investigation, forcing him to move down to the hospital's basement. On October 22, 2077, the investigation was completed, allowing Armand to move back into his office.

Post-War
The hospital survived the Great War in a preserved condition. Three doctors, Jovaughna Terrence, Donna “Dawn” Bonnet and Walter Leach, arrived at the hospital a year ago. The trio realized the "dire need" for quality, affordable medical care, and partnered together to form the Board of Caregivers in order to attain this goal. Now called Mt. Sin Central Clinic, the clinic has been in operation for a year.

Around six months into operation, the clinic began receiving an influx of chem-addicted patients suffering from addiction to Nectar, a new chem that is highly resistant to the effects of Addictol and folk-remedies, such as Radscorpion Egg Omelettes. This forced the clinic to begin broadcasting a distress call six months later, informing about operating at peak capacity and requesting aid in the form of supplies, expertise and hired guns, offering Caps as a payment for any assistance.

Nectar was formulated by Walter Leach while on the road, who utilized materials within the clinic's basement shortly after its discovery. Intended to be an "honest-to-God painkiller," Leach ran small tests on passerbys, sewing up their wounds and healing any damages while they were under its effects.

Word reached to local Raider boss, Hot-Rod, who struck a deal with Leach eight months prior, paying him "more Caps than [the Clinic] could ever refuse" in exchange for Nectar manufacturing. Leach became aware of Nectar's extremely addictive effects six months ago when patients began flooding the hospital. As a result, he ended all synthesization of the chem.