Camden ER Study is online

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First No Comments »

$46 million to care for top 1% of users!

Yesterday we published information about the Emergency room study referenced in Sunday’s Star-Ledger entitled “Repeat ‘Super Users” are swamping the ER” by Carol Ann Campbell. To read that post click here.

We now provide links to the studies that were the basis of this report. These are on the CAMConnect web site.

Click here for the full report.

Click here for a presentation by Dr. Jeff Brenner. This presentation was made at a planning conference on June 1, 2006 at Rutgers-.

For a Summary Handout click here.

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Camden ER study documents the crisis but misses the full solution

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First 1 Comment »

$46 million to care for top 1% of users over 5 years!

Many live on the streets or in homeless shelters, or they are in and out of the homes of relatives or friends!

is the solution!

We read with amazement tinged with frustration an article in Sunday’s Star-Ledger entitled “Repeat ‘Super Users’ are swamping the ER” by Carol Ann Campbell [Email address: ccampbell #AT# starledger.com - replace #AT# with @ ]. The article highlights the work of “Jeffrey Brenner, a family doctor motivated to reduce costs, but also to improve health care for some of the city’s most difficult to treat patients.” Dr Brenner “obtained five years of ER and hospital records from the city’s three hospitals: Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, Virtua Health and Cooper University Hospital.”

The data documents the fact that “about 1 percent of ER and hospital users accounted for about 10 percent of total admissions. Those 1,000 or so super users showed up at hospitals more than 39,000 times over the five year period.

“One resident was admitted 113 times in one year, Brenner found. Another was admitted 324 times over the five-year period. The most expensive patient cost $3.5 million over five years. Overall, the city’s three hospitals were paid $46 million to care for these top users, most of it from government insurance and New Jersey charity care.

As the data rolled in, Brenner looked at the money and shuddered. He reasoned that for the same money he could hire 50 doctors and provide a concierge level of medical care. Or he could hire 100 nurse practitioners who could provide one-on-one care for 10 patients each.”

Robert L. Okin, a professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of San Francisco was quoted about how one program “which also involves nurses, social workers and doctors, has helped more than 1,000 people get places to live, alcohol and drug rehabilitation or government assistance. Each dollar put into the program saved $1.44 in hospital costs, according to a published study. He noted that this is “the tip of the iceberg. There are all kinds of other cost savings, such as jail costs. Court costs.”

We fully agree with Dr. Brenner’s data and even his point “no one benefits when people overuse the ER. Not the hospitals, not the taxpayers, and not the patients.” However, the long term solution is housing first. This has been documented in “Million Dollar Murray” by Malcolm Gladwell as well as numerous studies on housing first. Even the Wall Street Journal has documented that with permanent, supportive housing “homeless people that received housing and intensive follow-up by a case manager consumed fewer public resources” including emergency rooms.

Although, it is reassuring that our data is the same as found by Gladwell in Reno but it is depressing that we have our multiple million dollar Murrays in . When will we understand that ending homelessness is not only a humane response but also one that will save tax payers money?

Now is the time to create a permanent solution that involves housing first with appropriate social and medical services. When will New Jersey wake up and stop spending money on band aids and instead use our public and private resources to create a long-term solution?

To read all of our reports on housing first click here.

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Tools to Help Communities Develop Rapid Re-Housing for Families Programs

by Taiisa Telesford Family homelessness, Housing First No Comments »

New in the application cycle are funds set aside for Rapid Re-Housing Demonstration projects. As indicated in the Continuum of Care NOFA released on July 11, 2008, Congress has appropriated $25 million dollars for Rapid Re-housing programs that will be funded in each of the 10 HUD regions. HUD will award $23.75 million in Rapid Re-Housing for Families demonstration projects with $1.25 million set aside for an independent study of the selected programs. To view requirements and scoring criteria for Rapid Re-Housing projects submitted through the application, click the link below.

2008 Rapid Re-Housing Requirements

For communities that are looking to create Rapid Re-Housing projects, there is a wealth of information provided through research on existing for Families programs. In March of 2004, the National Alliance to End Homelessness published a study of Programs for Families. Highlighting programs in 14 different communities, this study details the structure of various Rapid Re-Housing programs from across the country.

Research conducted by LFA (LaFrance Associates, LLC) found that all housing first programs shared key program design components above the overall goal of providing housing to families first and foremost and wrapping services around them according to their needs once permanent housing is secured. These key program design components include: Read the rest of this entry »

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Students Find Affordable Housing for Homeless

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First No Comments »

We found this news story from WLBT in Philadelphia of interest.

Temple University students worked with SafeHome Philadelphia this semester to find affordable housing within the community for Philadelphia’s homeless families.

The project stemmed from SafeHome’s Executive Director Phyllis Ryan Jackson’s belief that if affordable housing did not exist in Philadelphia, the numbers of homeless would be much higher, as they are in New York and Los Angeles.

Ms. Ryan Jackson says, “It was always puzzling to me that if it were true that there was absolutely no safe and affordable housing available for homeless families — as is commonly reported — why wasn’t Philadelphia’s homeless family population skyrocketing every year? City reports show the number to be remarkably stable over the years, which suggests to me that by employing strategies like or prevention, we could truly empty our shelters.”

Units ranged from one to seven bedrooms and were in areas including North, South, and West Philadelphia, as well as Germantown, Kensington, and Port Richmond. The average rent was $668 per month. Yearly rental cost, on average, was $8,684 including security deposit. Providing subsidies for the housing, as well as home-based supports and linkages to community-based social services, would cost the city far less than the $35,000 per year it pays to house a family in shelter.

To read the full article click here.

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Did you miss the housing first chat?

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First No Comments »

Did you miss the KnowledgePlex chat on Helping Chronically Homeless Individuals Access and Stabilize in Housing?

To watch and listen to the video, which is in Windows Media format, click here.

A part of this chat included three PowerPoint presentation.

Click here to view the one used by Sam Tsemberis of Pathways to Housing.

Click here to view the one used by Arturo Valdivia Bendixen of Chicago Housing and Health Partnership.

Click here to view the one used by Norm Suchar of the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

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KnowledgePlex Chats on Housing First/Rapid Re-Housing

by Richard Brown Housing First No Comments »

Did you miss the KnowledgePlex chat on Helping Chronically Homeless Individuals Access and Stabilize in Housing? A part of this chat included a power point on Pathways to Housing. To view that presentation as an Adobe PDF file click here.

On Thursday May 22 at 2:00 P.M. ET the second chat will be on the all important issue of Rapid Re-housing. For everyone interested in Rapid Re-housing this should be a high priority event. Click here for details.

This is the description provided by .

“Rapidly Re-housing Families Who Experience Homelessness”

Thursday, May 22 at 2:00 p.m. ET

Rapid re-housing programs minimize the time families experience homelessness by providing short- and long-term rental assistance, housing search and placement assistance and home-based case management. The focus is on help families return to housing and their communities more quickly, reducing the strain on the shelter system. The panelists will describe the transformation of homeless shelter programs to ones that help families move into housing quickly. They will discuss the skills and staffing that a program needs to acquire, funding challenges, as well the broader impact on communities that adopt a approach.

Panelists

Britt Shawver, Housing Opportunities for Women, Chicago, IL
Marge Wherely, Hennepin County, Minneapolis, MN
Sharon McDonald, National Alliance to End Homelessness (moderator)

More information on this chat will soon be posted here.

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KnowledgePlex holding Housing First/Rapid Re-Housing Chats

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First 2 Comments »

KnowledgePlex will hold an expert chat on Thursday May 15 and Thursday May 22 at 2:00 P.M. ET on . Please note that these are new dates. This will be a two part series. Click here for details.

This is the description provided by .

“Helping Chronically Homeless Individuals Access and Stabilize in Housing”

Thursday, May 15 at 2:00 p.m. ET

Increasingly, communities and programs are adopting a approach to respond to homelessness. By helping individuals and families move rapidly into housing and providing services on a voluntary basis primarily following the placement into housing, communities are stabilizing the lives of individuals with mental illnesses who have experienced chronic homelessness and reducing the number of families residing in shelter.

Some people who experience homelessness remain in shelters or outdoors for years at a time or have recurrent episodes of homelessness. Typically, these individuals have mental health or substance use disorders and often are in poor health. Sam Tsemberis, with Pathways to Housing, helps people with mental illness move straight from the streets to apartments. Once the individuals are in stable housing, services are offered to make progress toward recovery and self sufficiency. The panelists will describe how to implement a approach, including the types of funding that can be used, challenges in working with private sector landlords, and the remarkable impact is having on communities and the lives of individuals who have experienced chronic homelessness.

Panelists

Sam Tsemberis, Pathways to Housing, New York City, NY
Norm Suchar, National Alliance to End Homelessness, Washington, DC (Moderator)

For more information and to join this chat, click here.

Chat Two
“Rapidly Re-housing Families Who Experience Homelessness”

Thursday, May 22 at 2:00 p.m. ET
Read the rest of this entry »

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KnowledgePlex expert chat to focus on Housing First on May 8th and 15th

by Richard Brown Ending Homelessness, Housing First No Comments »

KnowledgePlex will hold an expert chat on Thursday May 8 and Thursday May 15 at 2:00 P.M. ET on . This will be a two part series. More details will be released soon by . Click here for details.

This is the description provided by .

describes programs that help homeless people move as quickly as possible into permanent housing and then provide supportive services to help them maintain housing stability and connect with other resources in the community. approaches range from programs that provide permanent supportive housing to people with mental illness and substance use disorders, to those that provide short term housing assistance and case management to homeless families. teams up with the National Alliance to End Homelessness for this two- part Expert Chat series. We will provide examples and explain key features of programs for advocates, housing and homeless assistance providers, state and local government officials, and others involved in planning and implementing strategies to end homelessness.

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