SMU Nursing Students Provide Care in Oakland Homeless Encampments

海角直播 (SMU) alumna Georgina Grimm prefers working in disadvantaged communities so as a nursing student she jumped at the chance to do her clinical training with the most underserved population of all: people living on the streets.

Grimm was the first SMU student to work with the (STOMP), bringing desperately needed healthcare to Oakland鈥檚 homeless encampments in a bus outfitted as a mobile clinic.

Run by the in East Oakland and funded by , STOMP is trying to prevent people from dying on the streets by providing medical treatment in the field and encouraging them to seek primary care at a brick-and-mortar clinic.

As the homeless population in Oakland grows, tent camps of people living under freeway overpasses and in industrial areas are multiplying and becoming the most visible signs of the area鈥檚 affordable housing crisis. By some estimates, there are as many as 100 of these shantytowns across the city.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e like refugees in their own communities living under a bridge,鈥 says Grimm.

Since graduating last December, she works a few days a week at the Roots urgent care clinic and volunteers at least one night a week with the street medicine team.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very rewarding,鈥 she says.

This summer, Grimm was joined on the mobile outreach team by other SMU family nurse practitioner students while two SMU faculty members became clinical instructors for the first time at Roots clinics.

As living conditions deteriorate in the tent camps, the STOMP team hopes to prevent people without shelter from getting sicker and relying on costly emergency room visits.

Grimm says one of the biggest misconceptions about the homeless is that drug overdoses are their major cause of death, when in fact most are dying from the same chronic diseases as people in more affluent communities 鈥 diabetes, hypertension, and heart failure 鈥 just 15 years earlier.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not unlike what you see in a clinic in Walnut Creek,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e just not taken care of.鈥

Grimm says caring for people living on the streets forces students to focus on their patients鈥 circumstances and what is possible to improve their health in the moment. It鈥檚 one thing to drain an abscess, she says, but a bigger hurdle to convince a homeless woman to schedule a mammogram when she is struggling with daily survival and has no transportation.

鈥淪ome patients have not been seen by a doctor in 20 years,鈥 she says, recalling one patient who was unaware he was in stage-four heart failure. 鈥淲hen you do primary care in severely underserved communities, you see more advanced conditions.鈥

When Grimm first started doing medical outreach in homeless camps last year as a nursing student, STOMP would see an average of four patients a night. Now there are nights where they see more than 20 people in two hours.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about building a relationship over time,鈥 says Grimm.

She credits the patients鈥 higher level of trust in the mobile healthcare team to STOMP鈥檚 partnership with the , which has earned the confidence of Oakland鈥檚 homeless residents over the years by providing free HIV and Hepatitis C screenings and distributing clean needles to injection drug users.

Led by a physician carrying medical supplies in a backpack, the STOMP outreach workers tend to ailments and conduct diabetes and blood pressure screenings. They also distribute hygiene kits and hook them up with Medi-Cal and social services.

鈥淲orking in the homeless encampments allows students a view of a reality that most healthcare providers never see,鈥 says Rhonda Ramirez, EdD, director of SMU鈥檚 Family Nurse Practitioner Program. 鈥淪eeing how the homeless live is a very strong reminder that care is not only physical; healthcare providers also must include psycho-social elements in their evaluation of people they care for. I think this is a tremendous lesson.鈥