Tag Archives: Vietnam veterans/ Homeless Veterans/Homelessness

Southern Arizona Health Village For The Homeless

The news of  this innovative approach to addressing homelessness is from the Carondelet Heath Network.

Nationwide, there is a very conscious and concerted effort to end homelessness in America. From Long Beach to Fort Lauderdale there are volunteers dispatched to get an accurate census of the homeless population.

It is a bit sad to witness the population of young veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars joining in the ranks of homeless at such young ages.

Health Village for
KEY PARTNERS the Homeless
Southern Arizona Health
Village for the Homeless
brings the following groups
together for the first time to
work collaboratively toward
a common goal to end
homelessness:
HOPE FOR THOSE IN NEED
The challenge of providing health care services to homeless individuals is an issue every community
faces. The need for housing, food, job training and other basic necessities crosses medical,

behavioral and social services lines. Tucson’s homeless population includes about 4,000 people single

men and women, teenagers and families with small children. This population has grown as the economy has declined.

Carondolet Heath Network is the facilitator bringing these key partners together.
The Southern Arizona Health Village for the
Homeless collaborative was formed to develop
an integrated system of care. The program’s
flagship effort is a 38-foot air-conditioned
RV,known as the “Van of Hope,” which is
equipped to provide mobile medical services
at sites including soup kitchens, churches and
shelters. Carondelet Health Network and two
other primary partners, EI Rio Community
Health Center and Primavera Foundation,
work together to staff the van and connect
clients to community services.
Gwen Gallegos (Carondelet Health Network
and EI Rio) and Pam Gleason (EI Rio), family
nurse practitioners with extensive experience
in community outreach and care, are sharing
the role of nurse practitioner for the Van
of Hope. Medical Assistant Megan Griffie (EI
Rio) and Care Coordinator Lety Huerta (EI Rio)
work with the nurse practitioner to provide
care and community referrals. The van is
also equipped with telehealth technology for
providing services such as teledermatology,
telewound care, behavioral
health and other consultations
remotely.
• establish designated community-wide acute and
extended-care beds for homeless patients
who are discharged from the hospital.
• provide case management and social service
outreach to homeless children through school
systems.
• offer behavioral health screenings and
referral to Carondelet Health Network’s behavioral
health program with 24-hour crisis
assessment.
• conduct specialized health ministry training
for churches and faith-based communities
that already help the homeless with social
services.
The program was made possible by a grant
from an anonymous donor. In coordination with
local organizations, Carondelet Health Network
worked with Carondelet Foundation to secure
a financial commitment of $2 million from this
generous soul. The funds are payable at $400,000
a year over the next five years. This provides the
start-up funding for the staff and services offered
by the Van of Hope with the eventual goal of
creating a sustainable model of care.
• EI Rio Community Health
Center
• Interfaith Coalition for the
Homeless
• Pima Community Access
Program
• Pima County Health
Department
• Primavera Foundation
• Salvation Army
• St. Elizabeth’s Health
Center
• Veterans Administration
Telemedicine technology
on the van enables remote
access to physicians and
specialists.
Providing services to the
homeless
The goals of the Health
Village are to:
• reduce inappropriate
emergency visits and
inpatient admissions for
preventable conditions
that become acute due to
a lack of primary care.

With Vietnam Vets The Beat Goes On

Many thanks to Steve Lopez of the Los Angeles Times, CalVets and my Army pal Bill Howard for forwarding this story. It needs to be read by the very wide audience of veterans. At times this blog is but a hitching post for information that wants to come to town.  I am sure the authors appreciate the accolades.

At Veteran Veritas we are, “E Pluribus Unum.”

By Steve Lopez

Los Angeles Times

More than 40 years ago, while the Vietnam War was raging, the Los Angeles son of a world-famous critic of the war got a draft notice. Steve Peck managed to get a temporary deferment because he was in college. But after graduation, it was time to report to the Marines for duty.

Peck’s mother told Steve she could probably arrange for him to skip out and stay with family in Sweden, but he wasn’t very politically aware and wasn’t opposed to serving. “I certainly didn’t want to use my father,” said Peck, even if his famous Oscar-winning dad might have been able to get him out of military service.

So Stephen Peck, the son of actor Gregory, went to Vietnam in 1969 with the 1st Marine Division. Lt. Peck completed his tour in 1970, went to film school at USC and became a documentary filmmaker. Not until 1990, though, did he realize what he wanted to do with his life.

That was the year Peck made two films about war and its aftermath, and on the speaking tours to veterans groups that followed, he realized he was talking to the kind of people he wanted to work for. So for the last 20 years, Peck has devoted himself to helping vets transition to civilian life.

“In the film business you have to sell yourself, and I wasn’t very good at that. I’m good at helping other people,” said Peck, who in August became president of U.S. VETS, an L.A.-based nonprofit that serves 2,500 vets a day in nine states, with a big focus on rescuing homeless vets from the streets.

I went to see Peck last week in Long Beach, where 545 formerly homeless vets live and get job training, addiction treatment and other services from U.S. VETS. Peck said the demand for services nationwide is bound to grow dramatically, given thousands of multiple deployments to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and there’s no way the Department of Veterans Affairs will be able to answer the need.

That’s unacceptable, if you ask me, but it gets worse. ProPublica and NPR reported recently that the military is refusing to diagnose and treat traumatic brain injury because of the high cost of treatment.

It would be nice if those who led the charge to war were as militant about treating injured soldiers as they were about delivering tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans. But Washington is crawling with cowards and hypocrites, which makes the work of nonprofits like U.S. VETS all the more important.

Peck says an estimated 20% of all vets will suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, but only 40% of those afflicted will seek help. Crunch those numbers, and it means roughly 250,000 vets who served in Iraq and Afghanistan will go untreated. And that will translate into thousands of fractured families, lost jobs and more homelessness.

So Peck and his staff have come up with a new program to help stem the tide. Beginning in January, they’ll be going to college campuses and into the streets in search of vets who need help but either don’t know it or don’t know where to turn. U.S. VETS is building a network of contacts on local college campuses, where several thousand vets in Greater L.A. are taking advantage of the new G.I. bill.

U.S. VETS will use outreach workers and a clinical psychologist and make use of its partnership with the Long Beach VA Medical Center’s medical and psychiatric teams. Adam Renteria, one of the outreach workers, is the perfect example of whom U.S. VETS wants to go after. Renteria survived the invasion of Baghdad in 2003 but came home shell-shocked.

“Nobody will hire a vet because of that stare in their eye,” said Renteria, who had it so bad, he couldn’t hold minimum-wage jobs. He thought the enemy might be up there behind the windows of tall buildings or on rooftops, and he flinched at the sound of a car’s backfire.

“I couldn’t handle it. I went stir crazy for about three years trying to figure out where I was. I had sleepless nights, the shakes, the whole bit,” said Renteria, who ended up living in his car.

Like a lot of vets, he figured he could handle his problems on his own.

“You don’t know you need help, you don’t know where to turn for help and there’s that stigma” associated with mental disorders, said Renteria. Not to mention a prevalent feeling among vets that the VA will tangle you in red tape and dispute war-related stress.

Renteria had another reason for not seeking help.

“I saw quite a few of my buddies get injured, get blown up, and you always figure they need the services most. You don’t want to take away any part of that pie because it takes away from them.”

As a student at Cal State Long Beach, Renteria helped establish a veterans club on campus, got a degree in history in May and was hired by U.S. VETS in August.

“This is the perfect marriage,” he said. “To help my battle buddies come home. And it’s therapy for me too.”

Peck said that when he returned from Vietnam, there was no diagnosis called post-traumatic stress disorder. If you were a loner or acted out, you were just a crazy vet.

Making those documentaries about war was probably his own form of therapy, Peck said, and it got him back to where he needed to be.

If you’d like to know more about his program, go to http://www.usvetsinc.org.