The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Helping the homeless where they’re living

‘Street doctors’ provide medical care in shelters and parks, under bridges

- By Steve Hamm

Homeless people tend to have trust issues, but when Phil Costello approaches, they typically greet him like family. That’s because Costello, clinical director for homeless care at Cornell Scott-Hill Health Center in New Haven, puts effort into building relationsh­ips and trust so he can get people the medical care they need.

Quentin Staggers, homeless for nearly a decade, credits Costello with saving his life. He awoke one day on a bench on the New Haven Green with a blinding headache. He saw Costello and asked for help. Costello took Staggers’ blood pressure — a frightenin­g 200 over 167 — and sent him to a clinic, where he got medication­s to stabilize his condition.

“If it wasn’t for him taking my blood pressure right then and there, I probably would have had a heart

attack,” Staggers says.

Some of New Haven’s homeless call Costello the “street doctor.” And while he’s an advanced practical registered nurse rather than a medical doctor, he and his team provide on-the-spot medical care for homeless people where they are — in soup kitchens and shelters, in parks and under bridges, and on some of New Haven’s meaner streets. They send people to the clinic for more serious issues, including mental illness and drug addiction. They run one of the most extensive such outreach program in the state.

Cornell Scott’s program is part of a movement that is gathering steam across Connecticu­t. In Hartford, Stamford, Bridgeport, Norwalk, Danbury and other cities, health care providers are collaborat­ing with housing advocates and others to offer better care for homeless people. They’re reaching out to provide people the shelter, food and medical care that can improve the quality of their lives, and, potentiall­y, bring them back into the mainstream.

At the same time, these organizati­ons hope to reduce the high cost of providing health care for a hard-toserve group. Roughly 40 percent to 45 percent of the most frequent visitors to the state’s hospital emergency rooms are homeless, according to a 2017 study by the Partnershi­p for Strong Communitie­s. For instance, one homeless man visited Norwalk Hospital 110 times in a single year. At more than $1,000 per visit, the cost quickly adds up. Experts say the state could save tens of millions of dollars per year by treating people on the street or in clinics instead.

“When Phil and the outreach team provide care in the field, it can prevent a whole series of ER visits and inpatient hospital stays at exponentia­lly greater cost,” says Michael Taylor, CEO of Cornell Scott.

Those cross-agency collaborat­ions help, too.

Seven years ago, officials at Middlesex Hospital realized they had to respond to overuse of the ER by homeless people. It was expensive and disruptive. They created the Middlesex County Community Care Team to coordinate services for the most frequent users of the hospital.

Today the hospital’s CCT includes representa­tives from 14 community organizati­ons, including health care providers, soup kitchens and shelters, housing placement agencies, and the state Medicaid system, which funds health care for poor people. They meet weekly, identifyin­g frequent users of the ER, getting their permission to share informatio­n about them, and developing individual­ized plans for health care, housing and social services.

“We all work together to get the person what they need and to get them functionin­g again,” says Terri DiPietro, director of Outpatient Behavior Health Services at Middlesex Hospital.

The Middlesex CCT has delivered impressive results. In the first year, 2013, ER visits by high-frequency users were reduced by 63 percent. In 2016, approximat­ely $1.7 million in ER visit costs were avoided.

Not surprising­ly, the community-integrated care model is spreading across the state, with activities in 15 communitie­s now.

“Every community is waking up to the need for this,” says Terry Nowakowski, chief operating officer for the Partnershi­p for Strong Communitie­s in Hartford.

The CCTs have produced many success stories. In Danbury, a man who had been living in a van, and was poisoned by using a camp stove for warmth, is now housed, on medication for hypertensi­on and looking for a job. “We’re not done with him, either,” says Kevin McVeigh, a social worker with the CCT who helps homeless people navigate community services. “We’ll continue to monitor him and help him when he needs it.”

Over the past few years, the state has made substantia­l

“We all work together to get the person what they need.”

— Terri DiPietro, director of Outpatient

Behavior Health Services at Middlesex Hospital

progress in finding long-term housing for homeless people. The population dropped from 4,450 in 2014 to 3,387 last year, down 24 percent, according to the Connecticu­t Coalition to End Homelessne­ss.

Still, there’s a lot of suffering, so it’s important to expand the health care safety net, health advocates say. People exposed to the elements and lacking routine medical care get sick more often and stay sick longer. And, since they often have multiple health problems, treating them tends to be complicate­d. Ultimately, “they die expensive deaths,” says Middlesex Hospital’s DiPietro.

Health care leaders say they’re hampered by rules for providing and paying for services. Medicaid, for instance, reimburses for those expensive ER visits, but money is tight when it comes to paying for preventive care. “It’s penny wise and pound foolish if you don’t provide preventive and routine care, and people end up in the ER,” says Dr. Charles Herrick, chair of psychiatry at Danbury and New Milford hospitals. “This is where our country is struggling.”

The Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n estimates that the state could save up to $28 million in Medicaid-reimbursed ER costs per year if all of 23 regions adopted the CCT program. While the general assembly approved $4.5 million to support CCTs in 2015, the money was never spent due to budgetary shortfalls.

Now, because of looming budget cuts at the state and federal levels, money is going to get even tighter, so health care leaders say they’re relying on ingenuity to get things done. To stretch dollars, the Cornell Scott team is recruiting volunteer medical students and retired clinicians to bolster their street medicine program.

For Cornell Scott’s Costello, the medical care his team provides is part of an even higher calling. He says, “Whether you can make people better or not, the important thing is to treat them with respect, to provide an open ear, and to be there in their moment of need so you can provide some comfort.”

 ?? Connecticu­t Health I-Team ?? Phil Costello, clinical director of homeless care for Cornell Scott-Hill Health Center in New Haven, is called the “Street Doctor” for the on-the-scene medical care he provides.
Connecticu­t Health I-Team Phil Costello, clinical director of homeless care for Cornell Scott-Hill Health Center in New Haven, is called the “Street Doctor” for the on-the-scene medical care he provides.

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