Speaking of the Health Care Crisis...
Hagan Asks UH and Clinic to Help Serve More Poor People
In today's paper, the Plain Dealer did a story about indigent care and
the response by our local health care empires. We have talked about
these problems for years in the pages of the Grapevine. The shelters
see these issues every day with people improperly discharged from the
hospitals. We also just posted a discussion about the nursing home
problem today on this blog. Our health care system for poor people is
broken and needs to be scrapped and rebuilt from the ground up. NEOCH
and others are trying to get some facts from the shelters on the
number of people in need of some nursing care every day right now
living in shelter.
I can tell you that there are now more than one ambulance trip per
night from LMM 2100 Lakeside shelter to the hospitals. The "emergency"
rooms have become the primary care doctors for most homeless people.
The wait in the "emergency" room is now typically6-8 hours, but on
busy nights can be double that wait. There are just so many people at
the "emergency" room waiting for non-emergency care or prescriptions
that the system is at a breaking point. Many homeless people shop
emergency rooms based on previous debt. For example, they do not want
to be hassled about a $10,000 bill at Lutheran so they will walk down
to MetroHealth. Why the hospital would present a $10,000 bill to a
person who has not earned that amount of money in the last five years
combined is a mystery to me? We now have a public health system in
which a person starts off at the business office discussing their
ability to pay before they ever see a health care professional.
A big first step for these quasi-not-for-profit hospitals would be to
pour huge resources into the neighborhood health centers and the Free
Clinic. Having more doctors available in Hough NEON Health Center, or
Care Alliance or McCafferty Health Center or any of the other
facilities would make some difference in reducing the problems at the
Emergency room. Commissioner Hagan, a great champion of MetroHealth,
needs to continue to push UH and the Clinic, but he cannot forget the
neighborhood based health care system that has a proven track record
and could alleviate some of the problems at the "emergency" rooms.
Brian
Posts by Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless staff and Board.
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