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University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

Health Care Reform and the Homeless

Homeless would benefit from health care reform, By Wayne Parry (AP), August 13, 2009, Idaho Statesman: “Victor Rozanski’s wife gave him an ultimatum: It’s either me or the bottle. He chose the bottle. The drinking wrecked his marriage. The 47-year-old lost his job as a printer, and hopped on a bus to Atlantic City, where his life’s savings of $1,500 vanished in two days of drinking and gambling. While sleeping in an alley one night, he nearly lost a leg to a cut that became infected and infested with maggots. His hernia and psychiatric disorders went untreated for years as he bounced from one casino bus lounge to the next, getting rousted every hour or so. People like Rozanski, who is trying get off the street with the help of a homeless shelter detox program, have gotten scant attention in the contentious national debate over whether and how to reform the nation’s health care system. Among the nearly 50 million Americans who don’t have health coverage are an unknown number of homeless adults, who would become eligible for Medicaid under proposals being considered in Congress…”