Student Street Clinic Helps Homeless
Mike
O'Sullivan
October 12, 2012
LOS
ANGELES — Medical students in California are getting real-world experience by
helping the homeless on the streets of Los Angeles. They are filling gaps
in the health-care system while learning about their future profession.
The
patients sit on folding chairs along the sidewalk in Hollywood, as students
unload supplies and medical records from a truck. They are creating a
makeshift clinic on the street.
The
first stage is triage, assessing the needs of poor and homeless at this
once-a-week mobile clinic. It is run by students from the University of
California, Los Angeles, who operate similar clinics in different communities
on other nights.
They
provide medicine and offer clean socks and reading glasses to those who need
them. They bandage injuries and monitor vital signs.
Another
charity offers nutritious meals to the patients. Students in social work
and law also come to offer assistance, getting long-term help from the
government or private agencies for those people who qualify.
Patient
Charles Brownridge comes here every week, as much for companionship as health
care. “I like the atmosphere, the food, and they give pretty good
service. They are training, sort of like rookies doing an
apprenticeship. And it is fun to be around youngsters. It is a nice
atmosphere.”
Physician
Walter Coppenrath helped start this street clinic 12 years ago when he was a
medical student. He now teaches at UCLA and sees patients at a nearby
medical center. He says this mobile care is crucial for this population.
“Small
infections on your foot might be able to be handled by just changing your
socks, but when you [are not] able to wash in a bath or change your
socks," said Coppenrath. "They can actually lead to limb-threatening
infections.”
The
care is given to those who do not get help in other places, says medical
student Steffanie Becerra. “They see us as their only point of care within the
medical system where they can get their medications filled, a lot of people
with hypertension or diabetes who really have no other choice but to come here
because they just can not afford the medications elsewhere,” she explained.
The
mobile clinic helps both patients and students, says undergraduate Kevin
Norris, who plans to become a doctor.
“We
really treat them as individuals deserving of respect because so many of the
homeless people here in Los Angeles are really just looked down upon and
largely ignored by much of the population,” Norris stated.
He
says that once a week these people get the attention and the care they deserve,
and the volunteer work helps him understand his future role as a physician.
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