Lodi News-Sentinel

Hospitals step in to help house the homeless

- By Pauline Bartolone

During the five years Tony Price roamed the streets and dozed in doorways, the emergency rooms of Sacramento’s hospitals were a regular place for him to sleep off a hard day’s drinking.

“A lot of times I would pass out, and then I’d wake up in the hospital,” said Price, 50.

About two or three times a month, he would show up at a local emergency department. Sometimes doctors hydrated him with intravenou­s fluids and sent him on his way. Other times, they kept him a night or two.

“I’m kind of ashamed to say this, but sometimes it was just cold, and I (got) drunk,” Price said. “I just want(ed) to be warm and safe.”

Hospitals in Sacramento and around the country are taking steps to help homeless people find housing. Doing so, they say, will limit unnecessar­y ER visits and reduce wasteful health care spending. It also helps nonprofits such as San Francisco-based Dignity Health, Orlando-based Florida Hospital and Providence Health & Services in Portland, Ore., meet their community service obligation­s in exchange for tax breaks.

Dignity Health’s “Housing with Dignity” program in Sacramento got Price into an apartment, paid his rent for four months and set him up with a social worker who helped him become eligible for permanent housing.

Without that help, “I definitely would have been dead by now,” Price said.

A growing number of hospitals nationwide have invested in housing programs in recent years, from Florida to Chicago and farther west.

The Corporatio­n for Supportive Housing (CSH), a national lender and promoter of housing developmen­t for homeless people, says hospitals put $75 million to $100 million into projects it has embraced over the past several years.

In Oregon, five hospital systems invested in a $21.5 million project last year to build nearly 400 units for homeless people.

In Northern California, Sutter Health earlier this year launched an ambitious $30 million campaign to end homelessne­ss in Sacramento and two adjacent counties.

“There’s pretty good evidence that it’s more cost-effective to provide housing with supports than have these people live on the streets and just cycle in and out of emergency rooms and in-patient stays,” said Sarah Hunter, a researcher at the Santa Monicabase­d think tank RAND Corp.

A widely cited 2002 study showed that providing housing and supportive services to more than 4,600 mentally ill homeless people in New York City dramatical­ly reduced their stays in hospitals, shelters and correction­al facilities — though the cost of the housing offset the savings.

A 2009 analysis of supportive housing in Los Angeles County showed that people with stable housing cost taxpayers 79 percent less than their homeless counterpar­ts, and most of the savings were in health care.

However, a recent Health Affairs analysis noted that it’s hard to draw definitive conclusion­s about the cost effectiven­ess of such programs because they are usually small, the study methods variable and the data not always of the highest quality.

Cost savings are not the only benefit of housing homeless people. It’s also a way for nonprofit hospitals to “check a box” that exempts them from taxes, said Anthony Galace, director of health policy at the Berkeley-based Greenlinin­g Institute, which advocates for racial and economic justice.

And, “from a PR standpoint, it endears them to homelessne­ss advocates,” Galace said.

But he and other advocates say that recent efforts of health systems such as Sutter and Dignity will not make a significan­t dent in the homelessne­ss problem on their own, even if they do make a difference for one person at a time. To tackle the problem systemical­ly, “we have to have enough (investment­s) to meet the size of the problem,” said Joan Burke, director of advocacy for Loaves and Fishes, Sacramento’s largest homeless shelter.

California Gov. Jerry Brown recently signed a new state law expected to generate $200 million to $300 million a year for affordable housing from a real estate transactio­n fee. Housing advocates said it’s too soon to know if the new money can help contain homelessne­ss.

The Housing with Dignity program that got Tony Price off the streets is young and tiny. When it started in 2014, it served just five clients at a time on a budget of $150,000 a year. Now it houses 12 formerly homeless people at any given time, with financial assistance from the insurer Health Net.

That’s a drop in the bucket compared with the estimated 3,665 Sacramento residents who are homeless, according to the latest data. But Dignity says it is not aiming to end homelessne­ss. Rather, the program is designed to help ensure that the homeless patients it does take in get follow-up care after they’re discharged, said Ashley Brand, Dignity’s director of community health and outreach.

“Our hope is (that) dependency on the hospital services will be reduced,” she said.

It wasn’t until 2015, after Price tried to commit suicide and spent a week recovering at Dignity Hospital, that things began to turn around for him.

Because he had been in the hospital so frequently, he qualified for the services offered by Housing with Dignity. It paid for a one-bedroom apartment in Sacramento’s sprawling North Highlands neighborho­od and assigned him a social worker, Chris Grabe, who drove him to medical appointmen­ts.

Grabe later moved Price to a federally funded permanent housing program, which pays his rent of $806 a month and enables Grabe to continue checking in on him.

Price has been off the streets for nearly 21⁄2 years, and he’s been to the hospital only once since January.

 ?? ANDREW NIXON/CAPITAL PUBLIC RADIO ?? Tony Price keeps a small garden on his patio and shares the produce he grows.
ANDREW NIXON/CAPITAL PUBLIC RADIO Tony Price keeps a small garden on his patio and shares the produce he grows.

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