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Between January 2010 and December 2010, Care for the Homeless
staff provided services to 1,371 children and adolescents and 7,927
adults (9,298 unduplicated clients) in 34,063 service encounters.
Since 1985, Care for the Homeless has met the health care and social
service needs of homeless people in New York City. Homeless people
have special needs that make it difficult to access services. For
example, homeless people are most often displaced from their neighborhood
of origin, do not have regular access to a phone, and focus on seeking
shelter and food, not health care and social services.
To reduce barriers that homeless people face in accessing care,
Care for the Homeless coordinates health care at 36 service sites
where homeless people congregate and without regard to their ability
to pay. Our service sites include shelters for single adults, family
shelters, soup kitchens, drop-in centers, SROs, and a street outreach
program to the mentally ill in four of New York City's five boroughs.
In addition to these basic health-related services, our contracted
medical providers refer clients, when appropriate, to our social
service professionals who address a range of psychosocial needs
among homeless people, including mental health and substance use
services, and entitlement benefits, including help with Medicaid.
****If you are about to become homeless
and need
help ****
****If
you are homeless****
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