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TexasTowelie

(112,620 posts)
Thu Jan 6, 2022, 02:08 AM Jan 2022

With nowhere else to go, he slept in the emergency room

Howard Holten slept in the Integris Southwest Medical Center emergency department the night he left an Oklahoma City rehabilitation hospital frustrated with his discharge plan.

In July, Holten was riding his bike when a car struck him from behind in a hit-and-run accident, fracturing his left hip. Scratches from the accident still dotted his arms weeks later. Holten, 56, has spent much of his life in and out of homelessness. He spent an anxious two weeks at Jim Thorpe Rehabilitation Center, part of the Integris Health system, recovering from major hip surgery and trying to figure out where he’d go after he left the hospital.

“It was so painful,” Holten said. “I had to have someone help me even to stand up.”

The Integris social worker involved in Holten’s case called five shelters, but they were all full or didn’t call back. Plans to stay with a friend fell through. On his scheduled discharge day, Integris sent Holten to a shelter that immediately sent him back to the hospital because he was too unsteady on his feet for the shelter to safely care for him, according to Holten’s medical records.

Oklahoma City has limited resources for people experiencing homelessness after they’ve been medically cleared for discharge from a hospital. Hospital social workers often have few options but to discharge people to the street, typically armed with a bus pass, or to send them to local shelters. Oklahoma City’s four largest hospital systems told The Frontier that they do not have specific procedures for how to discharge homeless patients, apart from general discharge policies that apply to all patients, which are modeled after federal guidelines.

Read more: https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/with-nowhere-else-to-go-he-slept-in-the-emergency-room/

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With nowhere else to go, he slept in the emergency room (Original Post) TexasTowelie Jan 2022 OP
I think of the phrase "the least of these"... Grasswire2 Jan 2022 #1

Grasswire2

(13,571 posts)
1. I think of the phrase "the least of these"...
Thu Jan 6, 2022, 02:19 AM
Jan 2022

....people who are invisible, who have no resources. So many fall through the cracks.

And then I see an episode of BBC's CALL THE MIDWIFE where the British system sends nurses 'round to care for people and find them help of all kinds, and check on them to ensure the best outcome. Socialized medicine.

Where's our Mother Theresa, as an example?

Here I am, in a warm apartment with plenty of food and medicine and clothing. Running hot water. Electricity. I'm not rich, by any means. But I -- or any of us -- could be just as desperate as this man.

Tax the rich. Tax wealth. Discourage rampant consumerism. Let's open our eyes and see the needs. And help, as we can.

Just be like Jimmy Carter. Good-hearted, and kind.

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