(1-5-18) According to the National Health Care for the Homeless Council:
Seven hundred people experiencing or at risk of homelessness are killed from hypothermia annually in the United States – subnormal temperature in the body – remains a leading, critical and preventable cause of injury and death among those experiencing homelessness.
Whenever there is a deadly drop in temperatures, most cities try to persuade homeless individuals to enter shelters, but there are reasons why they refuse. In D.C., many shelters are not safe and most have a two bag limit, meaning you can’t take anything inside with you except two garbage bags of belongings. That means all of your worldly possessions are abandoned outside for others to pick through.
But there is another reason that many officials refuse to acknowledge: the homeless person sleeping on the street has an untreated serious mental illness and co-occurring abuse problem. They are not thinking rationally.
In the richest country in the world, there should be no homelessness. The answer is Housing First.
Stories about homeless persons with serious mental illnesses dying from hypothermia always upset and anger me, but none did as much as a story that I first posted in 2010. Has your community taken steps to stop these senseless deaths?
WHO IS TO BLAME FOR THIS DEATH?
From My Files: The residents of Morrisville, Pa., got an intimate look this holiday season at our troubled mental health care system. Paulette Wilkie, a homeless woman with a long history of schizophrenia, was found dead from exposure. The 56 year-old woman’s body was discovered last week behind Ben’s Deli, a sandwich shop that she frequented.
Temperatures the night before had dropped into the mid 20s. But that was not cold enough to trigger the county’s emergency homeless plan. Temperatures must sink to 20 degrees or below for two consecutive days before teams can be dispatched to try to persuade homeless persons to come indoors.
Reporter Ben Finley, writing in the Bucks County Courier Times, noted that people who knew Wilkie said she likely would not have gone into a shelter anyway. The owner of Ben’s Deli said Wilkie refused help from people concerned about her safety and health.Click to continue…