Yorkshire Post

Homeless ‘dumped on street in hospital gowns’ after discharge

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: alex.wood@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

HOMELESS PEOPLE have been “dumped on the street in their hospital gowns” after being discharged, according to hostel workers in Hull.

The claim was made in a survey which said the homeless faced “hostility and judgment” when they seek healthcare and are sometimes “treated like dirt” with staff assuming their symptoms are due to their addictions.

Healthwatc­h Hull, a local watchdog, spoke to 13 homeless people – around 14 per cent of the city’s rough sleepers – about their experience­s, be it GP, dentist, hospital or walk-in-centre, as well as dozens of staff from William Booth Hostel, Emmaus and the Switch project.

One homeless person told how their support worker rang the NHS helpline 111, but their “erratic behaviour” was put down to addiction. “The worker then called 999 and I was admitted to Hull Royal (HRI) with pneumonia,” the report added.

Another, who used mental health services in Hull and Scunthorpe, said: “They talk to you like dirt – it makes you feel worse.”

Hostel workers said many rough sleepers only go to hospital when the situation is “dire.” And they were critical of the way people were discharged, saying aftercare was “often non-existent”, with care packages failing to materialis­e.

They added: “Clients have been dropped outside the centre and left, without any handover or paperwork. Quite often they will be dumped on the street in their hospital gowns.”

The report, which makes a number of recommenda­tions, is due to be discussed by city councillor­s at a scrutiny meeting on January 19.

Health commission­ers said people’s experience­s were “especially disappoint­ing as these are very vulnerable individual­s who need extra support on discharge”.

Erica Daley, Director of Integrated Commission­ing at Hull Clinical Commission­ing Group, said they were planning to pilot a new service in the Discharge Hub at HRI, bringing together key services for homeless people.

She said: “This new service will include training for staff, as well as ongoing support for homeless people with their housing needs and access to health services.

“Through this we will also look to proactivel­y work with people who are accessing health services, but who we do not already know are homeless, and offer support to them, too.”

She said they were working with homeless people on the project and welcomed others’ views too.

Mike Wright, Chief Nurse at Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, which runs HRI and Castle Hill Hospital, said they tried to provide the “best possible care” for all patients, regardless of whether they had a home.

He stressed that the report discussed care at hospitals around the region and did not specify which hospital had discharged patients in their hospital gowns.

He added: “Our Patient Experience Team has received no record of any such incident happening at any time.

“With no evidence to support this claim, we are unable to comment further.

“Had an incident of this nature occurred involving one of our patients, we would have expected the relevant staff working in hostels to follow safeguardi­ng procedure by raising their concerns directly with us to ensure the matter was fully investigat­ed.”

Quite often they will be dumped on the street in their hospital gowns. Hostel workers speak about the experience­s of homeless people.

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