A Plan to Eradicate Homelessness
The homeless—those we see each day and others living invisible lives—can succumb to bodily insults both terrible and terribly expensive, and the rest of us foot the bill unwittingly.
The costly embarrassment of urban homelessness can come to a screeching halt by moving the homeless into simple concrete houses in specially built villages on inexpensive rural land, according to Vipin Kalia, MD (www.solvehomelessness.blogspot.com).
He explains that a street person is prone to a “$1 Million Homeless Man” phenomenon, in which something like a frozen toe can lead to a hospitalization and a $10,000 to $25,000 medical bill (that’s the first one society pays for).
A cycle of frozen toes and body parts, poor healing, and eviction from homeless shelters/nursing homes leads to more medical care, and amputation is repeated dozens of times. “Creeping amputation” becomes a way of life for the man, with him losing more and more of his limbs.
Society didn’t provide bare-minimum housing, so he ends up in a nursing home with a social cost of $60,000 to $100,000 per year, and over several years, this can easily add up to
$1 million.
Dr. Kalia proposes the creation of villages on the outskirts of town in which concrete houses, eight feet by sixteen feet, would house the inner city’s most unfortunate.
“With simple amenities in each house and a building with common dining, all homeless people could be assured of ‘three hots and a cot’ without having to be in jail,” he states.
Those wanting to better themselves would have ample opportunities, and all others would at least be kept out of the weather. Everyone would be free to live as he or she pleased, so long as no laws were broken.
Dr. Kalia estimates that total costs of building homes (about $4400 each) and required infrastructure, along with staffing fees, would be about $38 million to cover the housing needs of 1024 or 2048 homeless people. For more information, a complete version of this proposal is posted at www.solvehomelessness.blogspot.com.
Dr. Kalia offers up a request for help, “This is a big and perhaps shocking idea to some, but anyone who wants to collaborate and end homelessness now can call me at (317) 414-4439. If we don’t try, nothing will change.”
proposal coauthors:
Vipin Kalia, MD, has a BA in chemistry from Purdue University and studied medicine at Indiana University School of Medicine. He did his post-graduate training in internal medicine at Indiana University Medical Center at Indianapolis. He is assistant professor of medicine at Indiana University and general internist at the VA Hospital in Indianapolis.
Paul Wilson, MBA, has a BS in liberal arts from Excelsior College. His graduate degree is from Indiana University Kelley School of Business. He is a writer and editor in Indianapolis, specializing in public policy and health care.
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ReplyDeleteDear Dr. Kalia,
ReplyDeleteI would like to be a team player in your project for helping Eradicate Homelessness. I have had a similar vision for the Indianapolis area while working on a Psychiatric unit at the Inianapolis Veterans Hospital. I have observed how it continues to be a revolving door for homeless veterans in their sobriety and treatment. I believe it would be beneficial if we had a work facility for veterans where they could be taught leadership and occupational skills. Many homeless veterans that I have spoken with want to work in order to provide for them and their families however there is not a productive system put in place to give them such opportunities. It would be a blessing and a privelege to help you in this needed project that you have begun. Please feel free to call me at 765-618-1487 in order to discuss this matter further.
Below is a website that you might find interesting regarding employment for veterans. I believe this would be an ideal thing to facilitate in the Indianapolis area in reference to your proposal.
Website: http://www.ameriqual.com/about/
With much regards,
Brad James