The News & Advance
Email Facebook Twitter Mobile RSS
|
 
NewsNews

HEAL's Good News for the Low-Income

»  Comments | Post a Comment

Known as the HEAL Project, the program is a partnership between the Lynchburg-based Virginia Legal Aid Society and the Lynchburg Family Practice Residency Center. Both of those groups serve low-income residents free of charge.

By working together, however, they can more efficiently reach more people in the area.

“Low-income people have lots of obstacles to living healthy lives,” said David Neumeyer, executive director of the Legal Aid Society. So when the lawyers assisting them discover health problems in their surroundings, they will now be able to call on a team of doctors to help out.

The HEAL Project members could resolve a problem in this way: A physician determines that a moldy apartment is contributing to a patient’s asthma. Dr. Pat Pletke of Family Practice Residency said the traditional way of dealing with that problem was to connect the patient with a social worker. But that didn’t always resolve the legal maze confronting the patient.

Now a doctor will refer the patient to the Legal Aid Society where a lawyer could use the court system to force the landlord to clean up the mold or break the lease.

The HEAL Project, which stands for Health, Education, Advocacy and Law, extends beyond landlord-tenant matters,

Jeremy White, managing attorney for the Legal Aid Society, said the program uses the legal system to ensure that low-income residents and their children receive public benefits, such as food stamps and Medicaid, and to identify mental health issues in the families.

The combination of medical services and legal services can introduce low-income families to options they may not have known were available. And that, in the long run, could save money.

Pletke pointed out, for example, that removing a person from an unhealthy living situation can reduce hospital costs and expensive medical costs down the road.

Neumeyer added that legal intervention in a contaminated household can reduce the need for prescription drugs and visits to the emergency room, the most expensive medical care that’s available.

The Family Practice Residency Center teaches young doctors the details of running a family medical practice. Part of that training includes a seminar offered by White with the hope that the physicians will apply the experience they have gained through exposure to the Legal Aid Society when they begin their own family practices.

Combining the talents of attorneys and physicians for the benefit of low-income families is just another way to strengthen the fabric of the community. Lynchburg is fortunate to have professional folks who are so willing to help those who need help but don’t always know where to turn.

Terms and Conditions

Advertisement

 
 

Advertisement

Reader Comments

*Facebook Account Required to Comment. If you are not already logged into Facebook, please click the comment button to do so.

Deal of the Day

Advertisement

Be the first to know!

Be the first to know!

Get breaking news e-mail alerts.

Advertisement

 

More Ways to Connect

 
 

Top Stories

ViewedNews
  • 1.Suicide reported at Rivermont bridge
  • 2.Appomattox man dies at Amherst County paper mill
  • 3.Details released in motorcycle accident on Timberlake Road
  • 4.Man killed in paper mill accident in Gladstone
  • 5.Liberty University to resubmit James River dock request
  • 6.Forest retail center planned for U.S. 221 complex
  • 7.Driver charged after car flips in U.S. 460 median in Lynchburg
  • 8.Lynchburg company to close after almost 130 years
  • 9.Bedford County Schools finalize budget, cut 10 positions
  • 10.Sun Belt shuts door on Liberty's bid to join conference

Advertisement

Media General
KewlBoxBoxerJam: Games & Puzzles
Games, Puzzles & Trivia
Blockdot: Advergaming and Branded Media
Advergaming and Branded Media

MyYahoo!