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In the U.S., over 35,000 veterans are homeless and medical care is not their primary focus. To tackle this, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is initiating a mobile medical system to bring health care to homeless veterans. These mobile medical units, as described by Dr. Jillian Weber from Nevada, are vehicles providing health services directly to veterans in order to overcome transportation challenges, a significant barrier for them.
The story of Morgan Spicer, an Air Force retiree now sheltered at the Salvation Army in Las Vegas, illustrates the advantage of these units. Before the mobile health care, getting a checkup required taking various buses in a process that consumed his whole day. Now, with the mobile medical team, his clinic comes to him. Elizabeth Jarman from VA Southern Nevada Health Care sheds light on the initiative. As per her, these mobile units visit community shelters and transitional housing units, working from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., enabling veterans to access primary care services.
These mobile clinics are available in 25 cities nationwide, including Los Angeles, Chicago, Orlando, and Seattle. The initiative specifically addresses the known challenges homeless veterans face in accessing and engaging with long-term medical services.
The VA’s effort to fight veteran homelessness extends beyond mobile healthcare, providing additional housing and support services along with health care. For more information or help, visit va.gov/homeless/nationalcallcenter/asp. For more articles on health, go to www.foxnews.com/health.
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