skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

For many, proving U.S. citizenship to vote could be costly and difficult; MA considers corporate tax increase to bolster public services; WI's Supreme Court race laced with cash, power, vast implications; Doctor shortages in VA lead to changes to licensing rules.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Newly released Signalgate messages include highly classified data. Americans see legal political spending as corruption. Activists say cuts to Medicaid would hurt maternity care, and cuts and changed rules at Social Security are causing customer service problems.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Rural folks face significant clean air and water risks due to EPA cutbacks, a group of policymakers is working to expand rural health care via mobile clinics, and a new study maps Montana's news landscape.

New Medicaid policy boosts 'street medicine' in PA

play audio
Play

Monday, July 1, 2024   

Philadelphia is addressing its opioid crisis by deploying mobile medical units to provide Medicaid-funded "street medicine" to the unhoused population.

This initiative was made possible by a recent Pennsylvania policy change, allowing the city to bill Medicaid for outreach site medicine.

Maire St. Ledger, family nurse practitioner from Project HOME's Epstein Street Medicine program, said the opioid epidemic has significantly increased homelessness in Philadelphia, and its mobile units aim to offer both essential care and dignity to unhoused people.

"There are a number of organizations that are providing medical care to people who are unhoused," said St. Ledger. "But we're the only team that we know of providing primary care. So, there are a lot of people that will go out with vans who will do point-of-care testing for HIV, for example. There's another van that just does wound care, but we do all of that."

St. Ledger highlighted the program's significant impact on participants -- aiming to improve medical outcomes, build trust, and enhance access to health-care and support services with holistic, trauma-informed and harm-reduction care.

She noted a few years ago, MPOX spread rapidly, but collaboration with the local health department and community partners helped prevent further spread through vaccination.

St. Ledger said they rely heavily on their outreach teams to build relationships with the participants, which helps the mobile unit assist people by providing them with resources.

"They try to engage with patients or with people who were unhoused," said St. Ledger. "It might just be, in the beginning, bringing them some water, bringing them clean socks or a blanket - building those relationships, getting them referred to housing, to shelters, to detox, to rehab, whatever it might be."

Dr. Judy Chertok is a Family Medicine and Addiction Medicine Physician and Associate Professor at the University
of Pennsylvania collaborating with Prevention Point Philadelphia on the Overdose Surge Response Bus, launched in the summer of 2020.

Using city data to identify overdose hotspots, the team deploys its mobile unit to provide crucial resources to the hardest-hit communities.

"We collaboratively work to do some canvassing and provide lots of harm-reduction supplies, Narcan," said Chertok, "and then, for people that are interested, they can meet with the doctor and do same day starts of medication like Buprenorphine for addiction."

Chertok said a new survey on the Mobile Overdose Response Program examines several aspects, including the general demographics of the first 237 patients.


It also analyzes housing rates, substance-use severity, and assessed for predictors of engagement and care after using the mobile unit.

"So the unit sees people for a few weeks, and then links them to ongoing care," said Chertok. "And so we try to look to see if there are any facilitators of what help someone get from this mobile space into ongoing care and stay on medication."

Support for this reporting was provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts.




get more stories like this via email

more stories
The Trump administration has begun to carry out what it calls "the largest deportation operation in American history." (AminaDesign/Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

Immigrants' rights groups are speaking out against the Trump administration's decision to start requiring people who did not enter with a visa to regi…


Social Issues

play sound

By Arielle Zionts for KFF Health News.Broadcast version by Zamone Perez for Virginia News Connection reporting for the KFF Health News-Public News Ser…

Social Issues

play sound

Political maneuvers continue with the pivotal Wisconsin Supreme Court race less than a week away - the latest coming from the White House. In the …


Florida's 2025 child labor bills, Senate Bill 918 and House Bill 1225, go further than 2024's House Bill 49, raising new safety concerns. (Pixabay)

Social Issues

play sound

A Florida bill that would roll back child labor restrictions cleared a Senate panel this week, sparking debate over whether it empowers families or …

Environment

play sound

As Congress debates cuts to offset tax-cut extensions, the future of the Clean Fuels Production Tax Credit remains uncertain, with potential impacts …

Good-government groups have long argued that in American democracy, one citizen - not one dollar - should equal one vote. (Adobe Stock)

Social Issues

play sound

After Elon Musk, a man once worth $327 billion, spent a quarter billion to elect Donald Trump, he was rewarded with unprecedented powers over the …

Health and Wellness

play sound

With a few days left in the 2025 legislative session, Republican lawmakers pushed through a bill they say should reassure doctors they can rely on …

Social Issues

play sound

The U.S. House of Representatives last month passed a budget resolution that would reduce the federal deficit by $880 billion over the next decade…

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021