Doctors in Hawaii will be able to prescribe housing for the homeless - or they can prescribe a one-way trip to Kauai for violent offenders
  Now a newly introduced bill in the Hawaiian legislature will classify homelessness as a medical  condition, as research suggests healthcare spending falls when people  have been housed.
  Previous efforts to deal with homeless people in Hawaii by flying them  to other states ended abruptly following a lawsuit by the states of  California and Washington. Now Hawaii's homeless will be moved to less populated islands.
  Steven Williams, a Trump voter in Hawaii, says he's disappointment by Trump's inability to create jobs
 
  
  One day last month, Stephen Williams asked a passerby for help and  then collapsed on the sidewalk. When the ambulance arrived in downtown  Honolulu, his temperature was well over 104F. 
   A life-threatening staph infection had entered his bloodstream.  Williams, who lives on the dusty streets of Chinatown, spent seven days  hooked to an IV, treatment that can cost $40,000, according to the  hospital that admitted him. But Williams didn’t pay: the bill was  covered by government dollars in the form of Medicaid. Over the past  four years, he has been to the hospital for infections 21 times, he  said, a consequence of psoriasis flare-ups in a humid climate and  unsanitary conditions.
      Cases such as these have prompted a groundbreaking new proposal in Hawaii.  Instead of prescribing medication to homeless patients like Williams,  what if doctors could prescribe something else that might ameliorate  their health problems more effectively? The prescription would be  housing.
   With this aim in mind, a state senator, Josh Green, has introduced a  bill to classify homelessness as a medical condition. Green, who is also  a physician, said the idea originated in his own work in the emergency  room, where he saw many homeless patients arrive for treatment of basic  conditions at great expense, but no real long-term benefit. “I’m really  just applying a band-aid,” he said of his medical work. “But these  problems require intensive long-term support.”
   A small number of homeless people require a disproportionate amount  of medical treatment. According to Green, a recent internal study by a  major Hawaiian insurer found that over half of the state’s $2bn Medicaid  allotment was consumed by a tiny fraction of users, many of whom are dealing with homelessness, mental illness and substance addiction. 
   Yet research suggests that healthcare spending for those who have  been homeless for long periods and struggle with mental illness and  addictions   falls by 43% after they have been housed and  provided with supportive services. Green said many of the individuals  he hopes to house cost the healthcare system an average of $120,000  annually, yet the annual cost to house an individual is $18,000. He  thinks that the total savings to the state could be hundreds of millions  of dollars a year.
   Doctors could prescribe housing on a  case-by-case basis. In order to qualify, the patient must have been  homeless for at least six months and suffer from mental illness or a substance addiction. 
 
                         “We’re already spending the money on homeless people, we’re just  paying for it in the most inefficient, expensive way possible,” he  argued. “We have a lot of capacity, but lack the political will.”
  The bill is winding its way through the state legislature, and faces a  key vote this week. It has already found supporters. “I think this bill  is a great idea,” said Daniel Cheng, an emergency room physician at the  Queen’s Medical Center in Honolulu. Last year, treatment for homeless  people at the hospital cost $90m. “When emergency medical services are  being heavily overused by a population that’s being poorly served, it  costs everybody,” Cheng added.
  Cheng said he most commonly sees homeless patients for the treatment  of psychiatric issues, infections, problems related to substance abuse  and general medical concerns such as a stomach ache or chest pain.  Often, patients return re-infected just a week after he treats their  wound, he said. “Instead of paying for an antibiotic, let’s take that  $5,000 visit and pay for housing. We’d be way more ahead.”
  In Cheng’s eyes, hospitals are already expected to pick up the tab  for societal ills. “We’ve clearly seen the medicalization of social  problems like alcoholism and homelessness,” he said. “People who are  intoxicated no longer go to a rehabilitation facility, they come to the  hospital. It’s become a medical treatment.”
  But not everyone agrees that homes should be part of the  pharmacopeia. In testimony last month, the Hawaii department of human  resources development, which oversees various social services, suggested  housing is beyond the healthcare system’s remit and expertise.
  And there are concerns that such an approach might spread the state’s  resources too thinly. “There is a population of homeless [for whom] it  is clearly a medical condition – the substance abusers and the mentally  ill,” Bob McDermott, a Republican lawmaker, was  reported as saying last month. “But other than that, it seems to be a stretch.”
  Honolulu’s largest homeless services provider agrees. “You don’t want  to broaden it so much that everyone is eligible,” warned Kimo Carvalho,  a spokesman for the Institute for Human Services. He said he is in  favor of the bill but that without strict parameters, healthier homeless  individuals could take advantage and drain the system.
  Another concern: walkouts. “If you give mentally ill people housing,  nine out of 10 will just walk away and go back outside,” Carvalho said.  He added that he thought the best use of Medicaid was targeted housing  for people with specialized needs, such as mental health group homes, or  addiction recovery housing, because many of the neediest clients  targeted by Green’s bill might refuse accommodation.
  Hawaii houses many of it's homeless people in small tents
                       
  One such woman was perched outside a drugstore in downtown Honolulu  recently, fumbling with the strands of her turquoise muumuu. A  homeless-services coordinator, Justin Phillips, who works in the  surrounding area, said the woman is frequently transported to the  hospital for psychiatric treatment after good Samaritans find her  wandering in the middle of busy streets, unable to communicate. 
  Despite high costs to the medical system, she has declined shelter  for years, Phillips said. She assaulted the last caseworker who offered  her assistance, and was recently released from the overcrowded state  mental hospital.
  “Until she gets medication, she’s not stable enough to live in  housing, and even then she’s going to require a higher level of care,”  said Phillips.
  Whatever the case, the bill seems like a no-brainer to some of those dealing with poor health in hard circumstances.
  Williams, the man who suffered from the staph infection, rested his swollen legs on a brick wall on the outskirts of Chinatown.
  “It’s very clear to me,” he said. “If I could get a place to stay, I wouldn’t have to go to the hospital so often." |