California
Related: About this forumStreet medicine pilot launches in Garden Grove
OCRegisterThe street medicine program is being organized by the countys provider of publicly funded health coverage, CalOptima Health, in partnership with the city of Garden Grove and Healthcare in Action, a medical group that provides health care and other services to unhoused individuals. Through a $4 million, two-year contract, Healthcare in Action will deliver care to up to 200 CalOptima members using a medical van to reach those living in parks, under freeways and elsewhere on the streets.
Challenges the teams will face include locating their patients and providing medications, because most pharmacies require a form of identification, according to Kaska.
"Some of the barriers that weve tried to avoid still exist within other areas, and we try our very best to navigate those waters and provide the care despite the barrier," he said. "Some of our teammates, for instance, will go and will pick up the medication for the patient and deliver it back to them, which is time intensive, but it matters."
Wishing success, and that it becomes a model for other cities.
CaliforniaPeggy
(151,982 posts)peppertree
(22,850 posts)When I lived in OC, around 20/25 years ago, it was nothing but ethnic cleansing from them.
Once, they compared Hispanics to red ants "who'll arrive as stowaways, work for cheap - but will quickly invade any well-tended garden."
They never retracted, much less apologized.
quaint
(3,514 posts)peppertree
(22,850 posts)I also remember their describing Democratic voters as "rushing to the polls in their GEO Metros" (the racial insinuation was a little more subtle - but to SUV-driving Laguna Niguel/Mission Viejo Republicans, it was there).
And then, they'll have some toadie write a feel-good piece about Mission San Juan Capistrano.
quaint
(3,514 posts)peppertree
(22,850 posts)I would, occasionally, run into a self-professed "Libertarian" - but they'd spout all the same talking points, including the coded language about "getting people off welfare."
Of course, if you pointed out that corporate welfare was bigger by far (and, as studies have shown, results in much less added economic output than social welfare), they'd just shake their heads and say "nah-ah."
Like 8 year-olds.