Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts

HIV/AIDS Housing at The Bridge

HIV/AIDS housing at The Bridge is a 20-bed facility on Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan. This residence is an important part of our mission to help special needs populations. Residents in this housing must be diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, have been or are currently homeless and have co-occurring mental illness. Most residents also have drug/alcohol addiction issues.

The program opened 10 years ago with funding from the Federal
Ryan White program, which is contracted through New York City’s Public Health Solutions, a not-for-profit conduit for Federal Health money. The building is a five-story walk-up with 2 studios and 9 two-bedroom apartments. Each resident has his/her own private bedroom and bathroom, and share a kitchen and living/dining space. The Bridge provides furniture and equipment.

This is an emergency/transitional program where residents stay for approximately 9 to 12 months while they stabilize medically and psychologically and financially. After being homeless, it is imperative that these individuals have this opportunity to stabilize. The goal of this program is to help residents acquire the skills and strength to move to permanent housing where they can live more independently.

The Bridge works with each incoming resident to get the medicine and health care they need, connect them to financial programs (such as social security, food stamps, Medicaid, etc), and teach them skills needed for living independently. Residents are required to keep their apartments clean and have food in their kitchen. 

A continental breakfast is served each morning in the common kitchen area, and each evening, residents work to prepare and eat dinner together. Many of the residents do not have cooking skills or nutritional knowledge when they enter the program and staff works with them and teaches them how to cook healthy meals for themselves and/or the group.

There are also group meetings/classes run in the residence two evenings per week. One class discusses medical issues, housing, and substance abuse. The second class focuses on LGBTQ relationship issues, medical and medication issues. 

Residents go on group trips to help them integrate back into society, and they visit museums, go to the movies, attend free concerts and other activities that are of interest to the residents. During the day, residents can also attend the drug/alcohol program at The Bridge headquarters, which is licensed and funded by New York State’s OASAS (Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services), as well as other Bridge programs. The Bridge strives to bring integrated care to each client.

AIDS Walk 2011

The Bridge team will be participating in the AIDS Walk 2011 on May 15th. Our team will be meeting at 9am on 72nd street and Central Park West to start the walk. Please join us in walking or sponsor our team by contacting Katherine Canto at t:212-663-3000 ext. 424 e: kcanto@thebridgeny.org, or Patricia Edwards at t:212-234-9746.

The Bridge offers Emergency and Transitional Housing for People with AIDS. Our 20-bed emergency/transitional residence for people with AIDS is funded through a contract with Public Health Solutions, the NYC conduit for Federal Ryan White AIDS funding. The program features an easy-access admissions process and provides 24-hour staffing, including case managers and a housing specialist to assist residents in obtaining permanent housing. Linkages to the full range of services at The Bridge are available to the residents. Referrals are made to other service providers as well, with the program’s case managers helping to coordinate services.

Although the housing is transitional, with a length of stay not exceeding 6 months, the period of stable housing offered by the program is crucial to link residents to the medical and other services they need. The trusting resident-staff relationships formed in the program create an important foundation for residents to move forward in their lives with hope about the future. 

William F. Ryan Health Center at The Bridge

We have made healthcare a priority with the William F. Ryan Health Center at The Bridge. Because the mental health system does not pay for medical services, we’ve had quite an adventure providing medical services to our clients.

More than 25 years ago, in recognition that it was simply inadequate to be treating just our clients’ mental health conditions while ignoring their medical needs, The Bridge conducted its first foray into healthcare. A friendly primary care doctor agreed to give ten randomly selected clients a full physical exam. The results were that more than 60 medical conditions were found in the ten clients.

For the past decade, we have had a remarkable partnership with the William F. Ryan Community Health Center, a Federally-Qualified Health Center, which operates an on-site medical clinic at The Bridge headquarters building. The clinic provides routine physicals, follow-up and monitoring of clients’ chronic health conditions and emergency walk-in services. The Ryan operation is funded by Medicaid and a Federal grant; The Bridge provides free space for the clinic. The partnership entails close cooperation between Bridge and Ryan staff to provide truly integrated health services.

Hundreds of Bridge clients use the Ryan Center clinic each year, avoiding emergency rooms and fragmented hospital-based care, and benefiting from a collaboration that provides accessible, high quality health care that is integrated with our own mental health and substance abuse services. The Bridge/Ryan partnership addresses a critical need of our clients in a way that is both creative and cost-effective. 

World AIDS Day

Today is World AIDS Day. Today is aimed at raising awareness for the disease. The World Health Organization established World AIDS Day in 1988 and it is planned and organized by the World AIDS Campaign each year.

For World AIDS Day Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a new initiative called Brooklyn Knows. It is a community based testing effort that aims to help Brooklyn residents learn their HIV status over the next four years. Today is a great day to get involved in your community.