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**Update**

Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point will be closed Tuesday, February 3, 2026.  No patient services will be available.  

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As we are all watching the weather inbound to impact Eastern North Carolina this weekend.

Out of an abundance of caution, Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point will be closed for clinical operations Monday February 2, 2026. NHC Cherry Point will reassess Monday for the following days.

Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point clinics, pharmacies, lab, and administrative offices will be closed.

All scheduled clinic patients will be rescheduled.  Patients with appointments will be contacted for rescheduling. While every attempt will be made to reach patients, if contact not made patients may contact the Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point Appointment Call Center which will remain open Monday, Feb. 2 from 7 a.m.-5 p.m. for rescheduling (910-450-4357, Option #1). Virtual appointments are also an option; speak with the Appointment Call Center for virtual appointment availability.

Please note, all operations are subject to change due to weather developments. Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point is working to send message out through Social Media as well.

News & Gallery

Articles

News | Dec. 31, 2024

“Why Serve Around Sailors? ‘I am One” Cherry Point Clinic Celebrates Service, Retirement of Mr. Joseph Farland

By Mr. Thomas Cieslak

Sailors and Civilians serving aboard Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point bid a fond Fair Winds and Following Seas to a staff member whose combined service to the U.S. Navy totals over three decades.

The retirement of Mr. Joseph Farland was celebrated Friday, December 13 aboard the clinic with facility staff and representatives from Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point’s Fire, EMS and Police Departments.
 
“Enjoy what you do and be kind to others,” said the Falmouth, Massachusetts native about the career advice he gives to others.
 
Farland served 26 years in the U.S. Navy as a Hospital Corpsman, four of them aboard Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point before retiring as a Senior Chief Petty Officer.  He then served as the clinic’s Emergency Manager, Anti-Terrorism Officer and Force Protection Officer for ten years afterwards.
 
At the clinic, he trained staff to be prepared for a variety of emergency situations and equipped them with tools to deal with the uncertainty the future may hold for them in their personal and professional lives.
 
“It was fun.  I enjoyed my daily interactions with my co-workers,” he said about serving in the U.S. Navy for so long.  “I am one,” was his reply to why he continued working with Sailors.
 
In retirement, Farland plans to travel with his wife of over four decades and be actively involved in his eight grandchildren’s lives.
 
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