Housing with Dignity puts homeless on path to stability, better health
Tony Price frequently visited the emergency department (ED) at Sacramento, Calif.-based Dignity Health while he was living on the streets. At that time, his diabetes was out of control and he drank heavily.
His life didn鈥檛 begin to turn around until he tried to commit suicide and spent a week recovering at Dignity Health nearly three years ago. He qualified for services offered by the then-fledgling 鈥淗ousing with Dignity鈥 program, which put him into a one-bedroom apartment. Housing with Dignity later helped him move into an apartment in a federally funded permanent housing program.
鈥淚 definitely would be dead by now鈥 without Housing with Dignity, the 50-year-old Price says. He says stable housing put him on the path to sobriety. His diabetes is under control and he has been to the hospital only once since he enrolled in the program.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 need to be in survival mode,鈥 he says.
鈥淗ousing with Dignity鈥 is a partnership of Dignity Health and Lutheran Social Services (LSS) of Northern California, a provider of supportive housing services. The partnership believes the best prescription for a chronically homeless patient, like Price, is permanent supportive housing.
The program is designed to give chronically homeless patients the stability they need to achieve better health. These are patients who have been homeless for at least a year and live in spaces deemed unfit for habitation.
Dignity Health and LSS launched the program on a modest scale in 2014. They placed five formerly homeless patients in one-bedroom apartments in a complex near LSS鈥 North Sacramento office. Today, the program provides temporary housing for up to six months for 12 clients at any given time, and helps them become eligible for permanent housing.
鈥淪table housing plays a critical role in a person鈥檚 health and well-being,鈥 says Ashley Brand, Dignity Health鈥檚 director of community health and outreach. The health system reached out to LSS to create the program, because 鈥渨e needed to find a better way to care for this highly vulnerable population and there was no better partner in the community in understanding this population than LSS.鈥澨
The program is patterned on the 鈥淗ousing First鈥 policy endorsed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development in 2002. Under the Housing First model, residents are given regular leases without their housing hinging on attending therapy or other conditions.
With an estimated 3,600 homeless residents in Sacramento, Housing with Dignity can鈥檛 address the magnitude of the problem on its own. But its partners want to show that providing free housing 鈥 even when clients are under no obligation to stay sober or find a job 鈥 will improve their health so much that they will be less of a burden on the health care system and society.
鈥淗ousing is good medicine,鈥 says Kate Hutchinson, LSS deputy director in Sacramento. 鈥淛ust the fact of having a roof over their heads, a warm place to sleep and knowing they have a place to go seems to be the most effective medicine.鈥
Dignity Health refers patients to the program. They are typically so-called 鈥渟uper users鈥 of hospital services or those struggling with chronic disabilities, like substance use disorders. The program鈥檚 goal is to find permanent housing for its clients, reduce hospitalizations and help them get the wraparound social services they need to help achieve a better quality of life and long-term stability.听
Dignity Health provides financial support for the apartments, with assistance from Medicaid insurer Health Net. LSS coordinates clients鈥 case management and supportive services. That can include teaching clients about eating and cooking healthier foods, helping them with transportation to a doctor鈥檚 appointment or picking up medications from the pharmacist, and connecting them to community resources.
Staff work with clients on issues like effective budgeting, anger management, cooking, nutrition and problem solving, says LSS Executive Director Carol Roberts. 鈥淲e look at the social determinants of health,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ur goal is to make people house healthy.鈥
Roberts says clients who enroll in the program eventually find and maintain permanent housing. 鈥淲e have amazing stories of transformation,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e meet people where they are and walk with them to where they would like to be going, and help them build a foundation for a new life.鈥澨
Roberts and Hutchinson credit Dignity Health for addressing the social determinants of health and treating chronic homelessness much like it would treat a chronic illness.
鈥淲e have the same goals and this is one of the best ways we can invest in the community,鈥 Roberts says.
Hutchinson adds that housing for the homeless makes sense when you factor in the costs of attending to chronically homeless residents at places like hospitals, psychiatric facilities, food pantries, shelters and jails. 鈥淧ut together housing and wraparound services, and hospitals will see amazing results in terms of decreasing these patients鈥 hospital utilization,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t is not complicated stuff, but it makes a difference.鈥
The results are impressive. Dignity Health鈥檚 hospitalization and ED use for clients enrolled in Housing with Dignity have dropped by 52% and 55%, respectively. But Dignity Health鈥檚 Brand points out that the biggest reward is seeing the transformation in the lives of the health system鈥檚 onetime chronically homeless patients.
鈥淜nowing where they came from and knowing they were ready for this step, and then seeing the outcome is something you can鈥檛 quantify,鈥 she says.听听
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