J'Amy Brown
Thomas Tighe, Judy Cresap, Elisa Atwill, and Bob Cresap filling dental health packages.
Patching Holes in the Health Safety Net
Learn a Little About Goleta-Based Direct Relief International
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Long associated with disaster assistance overseas, Goleta-based Direct Relief International‘s regional and national support services are less well known. Without fanfare, DRI has developed, or strengthened, multiple programs over the past few years to help uninsured or underinsured Americans with their continuing healthcare needs as well as expanded its domestic disaster response.
“With 47 million Americans without health insurance, we saw a slow-motion disaster in the making,” explained DRI press secretary Jim Prosser, adding that local needs are part of the larger picture.
A recent sign of Direct Relief’s services to Goletans was the distribution of free protective masks during the Gap Fire last July. At the height of the wildfire, approximately 35,000 N-95 anti-particulate masks were distributed by DRI volunteers and staff at points in Goleta as well as through city and county agencies, the Elks Club, Friendship Manor, the UCSB Sports Camps, and the Red Cross. Emergency responders were also offered the masks.
The lung protectors - most were in stock at DRI’s Goleta warehouse, thanks to an earlier donation from CVS drugstores - symbolize the nonprofit’s capacity for quick response with medical supplies to immediate threats. This is what DRI has done so well over 60 years of service. However, since 2004, Direct Relief has quietly built a network of partnerships with what it calls “safety net clinics and health centers” that now covers all 50 states and Puerto Rico. And the partnership delivers far more than emergency medicines and medical supplies.
“Direct Relief is really a safety net for the safety net,” said Cynder Sinclair, executive director for the Santa Barbara Neighborhood Clinics (SBNC), which numbers two medical clinics and a dental clinic in Santa Barbara and another medical clinic in Isla Vista. “Nearly 70 percent of our patients have income below the federal poverty level,” she added. Two-thirds of the people seen by the SBNC do not qualify for Medi-Cal, making them the face of the South Coast’s working poor.
When the clinics ran out of insulin for their diabetic patients, Direct Relief came to their assistance. Likewise, reported Sinclair, when one of their patients required a daily medicine that cost $11 a pill, DRI made arrangements to ease the burden. The clinics also received the N-95 masks last summer.
SBNC’s dental clinic on Milpas Street not only serves free care to adults but is also the only such facility in the county for the children of low-income parents. Its dentists and technicians regularly use supplies and dental tools provided under DRI’s “Healthy Smiles Dental Program.”
Begun in 1994 by Martha Angeles, Healthy Smiles provides full services, from teeth cleaning to extractions, to 120 Santa Barbara County children a year and arranges for around 60,000 children to receive tooth-care kits and, with their mothers, preventive dental instruction from Assistance League volunteers. DRI calls oral health “the number one unmet health need” in the county for low-income families.
Currently, more than 1,000 state-licensed medical clinics and centers participate in Direct Relief’s national partnership network. The nonprofit has worked on disasters with nearly all of them, explained Brett Williams, DRI’s emergency response coordinator. “We’ve identified people who do great work and just need the supplies to keep doing it,” he said.
Sometimes, the clinics need funds, and DRI has often found donors who will supply the cash. Over a two-year period following hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, Direct Relief funneled $4.6 million in grants to safety-net facilities and more than $31.8 million (in wholesale value) of specifically requested medical products, all of which were provided by pharmaceutical and healthcare firms.
These kinds of donations to competent, effective healthcare providers for the uninsured and underinsured free up local facilities’ resources. In turn, the clinics may hire more staff or expand services or hours. “For an organization like ours,” said Sinclair, “Direct Relief is an important partner, especially when the state’s budget is late in providing funds we count on.”
With the national economy diving into a recession, the Neighborhood Clinics administrative chief foresees only more demand for their services - and for DRI’s support of the safety net. “In 2007, our clinics had 41,000 total visits,” said Sinclair. “To date this year, we’ve already had 52,000. We’re trying to prepare for the big wave we see coming.”
The healthcare disaster is no longer in slow motion.
For more information on Direct Relief, see directrelief.org. For more on the Santa Barbara Neighborhood Clinics, see sbclinics.com.
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Comments
OK, this is a no-brainer; EVERY citizen should have health & dental care, PERIOD.
This is the richest, most technologically advanced nation on the planet, and we are still having this conversation. We can do better than we are doing, that much is clear, yet we continue to refuse to do so.
We pick and choose which Americans most deserve medical & dental care, housing, jobs,and respect, mostly based on which ones give us the warmest fuzzy feelings inside as we hand out the help.
Enough already.
Start with the cost of higher education and get that cut back to a reasonable level, then cut the cost of malpractice insurance, permitting and licensing, etc. These kids are coming out of school just buried in debt before they even start. How can they possibly provide medical/dental care at a reasonable price?
Put a leash on the greedy insurance companies and caps on malpractice awards. When people can't go to a doctor/dentist, this ends up costing society dearly in lost productivity, medical costs as people use emergency rooms for primary care, etc.
This is nuts. What we are doing is clearly NOT working and it is time to change the plan or maybe go back to what we were doing when things DID work.
Holly (anonymous profile)
November 10, 2008 at 1:08 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Holly, you keep saying that it is the government's job to "cut costs". Do you mean cut the true cost or subsidize with taxpayer dollars?
If you mean cut the true costs, then you are foolish to think that government has the ability to make our medical establishment more efficient through decree. Besides, they don't have any right to do so.
If you mean cut the costs by subsidizing with taxpayer dollars, then the MIC (Medical Industrial Complex) will be able to raise their prices significantly and profit immensely from the government subsidies. So at first your scheme to help poor people suddenly turns into a scheme to help big pharma and the MIC, while simultaneously killing the poor and middle class through taxation.
For this reason, socialism rarely if ever benefits the poor and middle class. If you look at net change, socialism generally benefits the extremely wealthy monopolies and actually hurts the poor and middle class. We can see this very easily by looking at both the national and the worldwide increase in the wealthy-to-poor income gap over the last century since the Federal Reserve and Income Tax were implemented in 1913.
I recommend reading Revolution: A Manifesto by Ron Paul. Start out with page 76 and 77 to get a detailed analysis of what I just described. Learn how freedom works for all, while socialism and tyranny only benefit the elite. You've been tricked into working for the wrong team.
loonpt (anonymous profile)
November 10, 2008 at 10:37 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Uh-huh.
No ideas...just criticism for anyone whose opinions differ from yours and oh yeah... "read this book".
Meanwhile, people still can't go to the doctor.
Any realistic ideas for how to fix that? Or just more cheerleading for the current system?
Cuz it ain't working, and no amount of reading various manifestos is going to change that.
Holly (anonymous profile)
November 11, 2008 at 11:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
No medical for all! That's the America I know!
dou4now (anonymous profile)
November 13, 2008 at 7:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)