‘Housing is health care’: A partnership with medical industry advances solutions

The Christian Services Center on Thursday hosted a conference in which homeless services professionals, health care workers and community leaders made plans for shelter and housing ahead of the summer months.

“Housing is health care,” said Warren Foster, program manager at Orange Blossom Family Health Center, a medical service center for people without homes.

Proposing a housing-first model, Foster presented a new housing assistance pilot program implemented by the state’s Agency for Health Care Administration in collaboration with certain health care plans and in partnership with Florida Medicaid.

The program will help secure housing for adults 21 or older who are on Medicaid, have a serious mental illness, have a substance use disorder, or experience housing insecurity or homelessness.

The goal is to facilitate a path to housing to improve health outcomes, serving up to 4,000 Medicaid recipients a year.

“I don’t want people to go off the deep end thinking that Medicaid is going to be able to house somebody because the reality is that the resources are not sufficient to actually permanently supportively house someone. But there are avenues,” Foster said.

Dr. Pia Valvassori, a neurologist who serves as a Christian Services Center board member, also gave a presentation. Her focus was on minimizing heat-related injuries and deaths this summer, as weather experts warn of dangerous record-breaking heat.

According to Valvassori, the Christian Services Center dealt with an unprecedented number of emergency cases in 2023 during the hottest months, including feet burns, dehydration, heat stroke and seizures.

Many lives were lost.

“Deaths due to extreme heat outnumber any other natural disaster. It’s having devastating economic consequences in our nation,” she said.

As warmer weather is expected to intensify into life-threatening heat conditions again, Dr. Valvassori said people who live unsheltered are at a higher risk of heat-related injury or death — especially people with disabilities or comorbidities.

“Part of the issue is mortality rates are greatly underreported, many of the deaths associated with extreme heat are as a result of chronic disease, not necessarily extreme heat in and of itself, so our numbers are greatly undercounted,” she said.

Valvassori says the organization is making a list of additional safe spaces, such as libraries, gyms and community centers, to help save lives.

There were about 50 attendees representing the health care industry, legal services, faith-based organizations, caseworkers, homeless services, local government and education institutions, such as the University of Central Florida.

Christian Services Center executive director Eric Gray wanted to make something clear.

“The major recommendation is this: Homelessness is not a problem for churches and charities to solve any longer. This is an emergency management issue, which means cities and counties. And so the idea that churches and charities are going to fix this at the scope of the refugee crisis that we’re experiencing right now is long gone,” he said.

Gray said the biggest obstacle is lawmakers who are passing legislation based on myths and misconceptions. He compared it to the misinformation and disinformation HIV and AIDS campaigns of the 1970s and 1980s.

“We have to find ways to engage local municipal governments, local county governments. And frankly, the homeless services system of care hasn’t done a good job of explaining all of that,” Gray said. “People who are experiencing homelessness don’t have a lobby, right? We’re their lobby. We are their voice.”

Lillian Hernández Caraballo is a Report for America corps member.

Copyright 2024 Central Florida Public Media

Author: Health Watch Minute

Health Watch Minute Provides the latest health information, from around the globe.

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