|
|
People
Need Health Care.
-Everyone
should have access to comprehensive, quality, and affordable health
care.
(click
here to download this factsheet in .pdf format)
For people struggling to pay the rent, a serious illness or
disability can start a downward spiral into homelessness, beginning
with a lost job, depletion of savings to pay for care, and eventual
eviction.
- Over 41 million Americans have no health care insurance (U.S.
Bureau of the Census).
- Nearly a third of persons living in poverty have no health insurance
of any kind.
- The coverage held by many others will not carry them through
a catastrophic illness.
- The number of uninsured persons seeking treatment is increasing:
overall, Health Care for the Homeless programs report a 35% increase
in the numbers of their patients who are uninsured (O'Connell,
J., Lozier, J., and Gingles, K., 1997).
Homelessness severely impacts health and well-being. The rates
of acute health problems are extremely high among people experiencing
homelessness.
- With the exception of obesity, strokes, and cancer, people experiencing
homelessness are far more likely to suffer from every category
of severe health problem.
- Conditions which require regular, uninterrupted treatment, such
as tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, diabetes, hypertension, addictive disorders,
and mental disorders, are extremely difficult to treat or control
among those without adequate housing.
- Housing is the first form of treatment for people experiencing
homelessness with medical problems, preventing many illnesses
and making it possible for those who remain ill to recover. Lack
of affordable housing makes it more difficult for people to recover.
Children without housing experience numerous health problems
that impact their development.
- Children without a home are in fair or poor health twice as
often as other children, and have higher rates of asthma, ear
infections, stomach problems, and speech problems (Better Homes
Fund, 1999).
- They also experience more mental health problems, such as anxiety,
depression, and withdrawal. They are twice as likely to experience
hunger, and four times as likely to have delayed development.
- In New York City, 61% of children without housing had not received
their proper immunizations (compared to 23% of all New York City
two-year-olds).
- 38% of children in New York City's shelter system have asthma
(an asthma rate four times that for all New York City children).
- In New York City, children without housing suffer from middle
ear infections at a rate that is 50% greater than the national
average (Redlener and Johnson, 1999).
- These illnesses have potentially devastating consequences if
not treated early.
Universal access to affordable, high-quality and comprehensive
health care is essential in the fight to end homelessness. A health
insurance system could reduce homelessness and, more significantly,
help to prevent future episodes of homelessness.
sources
Health
Justice Elements of the Bringing America Home
Campaign include:
- Health
Care Access Resolution
The Health Care Access Resolution directs Congress to enact legislation
that guarantees every person in the United States, regardless
of income, age, employment or health status, has access to affordable,
quality, comprehensive health care. The resolution seeks to build
the political will and the conceptual common ground for comprehensive
reform.
- Health
Care Provisions of the Bringing America
Home Act:
- A
Sense of Congress resolving to enact legislation to
guarantee that every person in the United States has access
to comprehensive, quality, and affordable health care;
- Strengthening
of mainstream addiction and mental health services programs
including the Community Mental Health Services Block Grant
and the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant
programs. The bill prioritizes services for people experiencing
homelessness, averts patient discharge into homelessness,
improves planning and reporting requirements, and establishes
a Federal plan on addiction, mental illness, and homelessness;
- Reauthorization
and strengthening of the Projects for Assistance in Transition
from Homelessness (PATH) and Grants for the Benefit of Homeless
Individuals (GBHI) programs. These targeted programs
currently provide essential mental health, addiction, and
other services to people experiencing homelessness, but are
not able to meet the growing need. The Health Title expands
the services provided by these programs and the agencies involved
in providing these services. It would also increase the authorization
levels of these programs to $100,000,000 for PATH and $100,000,000
for GBHI; and
- Strengthening
of services provided by the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS
Resources Emergency (CARE) Act (RWCA) to people experiencing
homelessness by prioritizing services for people experiencing
homelessness, expanding the scope of services provided, and
preventing patient discharge into homelessness. It also establishes
a Federal plan on HIV/AIDS and homelessness to ensure that
homeless persons have access to RWCA programs and receive
care appropriate to their unique needs and life circumstances
once in these programs.
Sources:
Better Homes Fund. Homeless Children: America's
New Outcasts, 1999. Available, free, from the Better Homes Fund,
181 Wells Avenue, Newton Centre, MA 02159; 617/964-3834.
O'Connell, J., Lozier, J., and Gingles, K. Increased
Demand and Decreased Capacity: Challenges to the McKinney Act's
Health Care for the Homeless Program, 1997. Available from the
National Health Care for the Homeless Council, P.O. Box 68019, Nashville,
TN 37206 8019; 615/226-2292, www.nhchc.org.
Redlener, Irwin, MD and Dennis Johnson. Still
in Crisis: The Health Status of New York's Homeless Children,
1999. Available from The Children's Health Fund, 317 East 64th Street,
New York, NY 10021; 212/535-9400.
U.S. Bureau of the Census 2002. Available at www.census.gov.
|