Chicago Sun-Times

Cops go extra mile for homeless woman

- NEIL STEINBERG

You go to the police for help, not the other way around. They don’t come to you for aid, generally. But that was what two 14th District Chicago Police officers did last week.

“They were very hesitant,” said Nancy Schreiber, a nurse with the Night Ministry, working at its medical clinic bus in Humboldt Park last Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.

“They came to the door of the bus and said, ‘Can you help us please?’ I’ve never been approached by the police to help them before. They said, ‘We have this woman and we don’t know what to do.’”

Schreiber followed the officers to a bus shelter near California and Division.

In her 12 years with the Night Ministry, the last line of assistance for Chicago’s impoverish­ed, Schreiber has seen much that medical profession­als rarely see: trenchfoot, frostbite, gangrene, untreated fractures, gashes that victims sutured themselves with clear tape. “These people are so marginaliz­ed, they hesitate to seek health care,” she said. “These people just suffer.”

The woman the cops brought Schneider to was certainly suffering, lying on a bus stop bench, covered with huge open sores.

“She looked 70,” said Schreiber, who later found the woman is 53. “Probably 80 pounds soaking wet. She had these lesions all over.”

Schreiber immediatel­y realized what she was seeing: MRSA — methicilli­n-resistant staphyloco­ccus aureus, a hard-to-treat staph infection common with the homeless.

“I see it all the time,” said Schreiber, who ran back to the bus, filled a shopping bag with bandages and ointment and tape. “I knew what she needed right now was to take care of those wounds.” She also grabbed their intern Megan Libreros, 25, a student at UIC’s Jane Addams College of Social Work, in her second week on the job. Her job was to talk to the woman. “She was really worked up and did not want to go to the hospital,” said Libreros.

The police officers offered to take the woman to Cook County hospital. “Which is very unusual,” said Schreiber, who told her, ‘You’re in a great deal of pain. The only thing to help you would be IV antibiotic­s. You really need to go to a hospital.” “I can’t do that,” the woman answered. She had been to county, she said, and while they treated her well, on the third day she went into the hall to look for a nurse, and they locked her in restraints. An ambulance was also out of the question.

“If we call an ambulance, it’ll take them to nearest hospital, which is Norwegian [American Hospital],” said Schreiber. “They are very punitive to homeless people. They don’t give them treatment, push them out of emergency room and then bill them extraordin­ary amounts. We don’t send anyone there anymore because they are not treated with any respect.” (I called Norwegian and talked to their spokeswoma­n and she had no comment.)

The woman was wearing what looked like pajamas, the thin material sticking to the wounds when the nurse tried to pull it back.

“Every time, the wounds would open up,” said Libreros. “She was screaming with pain,” This was the point where some cops would have tipped their hats and gone about their business. But these guys stuck around.

“They were really nice,” Libreros said. “They really cared about her and tried to make sure she got the best care she needed. I’ve been doing this for a few years, I’ve had a lot of bad experience­s working with the Chicago Police. But they were great.”

“What’s wonderful is the involvemen­t of the police,” said Schreiber. “The humanity, overwhelmi­ngly positive, above and beyond the call of duty. I called the station, trying to get their names. They haven’t called back.” That’s typical. I called the 14th district a few times, too, plus news affairs, knowing they’d never respond, and they didn’t.

The cops on the scene, however, did what was necessary — maybe. “I believed that death was imminent, she was so toxic from these wounds,” Schreiber said. “One would be stressful; she had them everywhere.”

Schreiber told the cops the woman was in no condition to decide. So they took her to St. Mary’s — at least they said they were.

“We called St. Mary’s, and have no way of knowing if she got treatment or what happened after the police left with her,” said Schreiber. “It was heartwarmi­ng, to see how these two gentlemen tried to help her.”

Libreros was able to learn a little about the woman, her name and history. She had a place to stay up until July. Then a Social Security check didn’t arrive. A reminder that people on the street are just that.

“They are people,” Libreros said. “They are not different from any of us. They’re either down on hard times or have mental illness. We’re all really close to being in that place someday. No telling what in her life took a turn and went wrong. That could be me in 10 years, or you, or anybody else.”

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