|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Inequality
New York denies asthma treatment to homeless children
Federal class action lawsuit filed
By Fred Mazelis
23 March 2000
Use
this version to print
A class action lawsuit was filed in Federal District Court
in New York on March 16 charging that New York City and State
authorities systematically deny adequate medical treatment for
homeless children in the city's shelter system.
The suit was filed by the Association to Benefit Children,
a nonprofit advocacy group, on behalf of four children suffering
from asthma, along with their parents, representing the class
of thousands of similarly affected children in the city. The plaintiffs
are represented on a pro bono basis by a major New York law firm,
Kramer Levin Naftalis and Frankel, as well as by the Legal Aid
Society.
Untreated or inadequately treated asthma has become epidemic
in poor neighborhoods throughout New York City. Tens of thousands
of children are severely affected, and a report issued last year
showed that hospitalization rates were more than 20 times as high
in the city's poor neighborhoods as in wealthier areas, a huge
disparity undoubtedly reflecting the impact of poverty, poor housing
and living conditions, stress and the lack of preventive medical
care.
In the city's homeless shelters the situation is even worse.
A recent study reported that nearly 40 percent of children in
the shelter system suffer from asthma. Many are not even diagnosed
when they enter the shelter system. Ninety percent of those with
persistent asthma are not receiving adequate medical treatment,
despite the fact that they are receiving shelter from the city.
On any given night, about 9,000 homeless children are in the shelter
system, so these figures reveal that more than 3,000 children
are suffering with asthma and being denied proper care. These
are statistics that the Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and other authorities
do not refer to in their repeated boasts about the so-called revival
of New York.
As the lawsuit points out, a child with asthma can live a full
and normal life if properly diagnosed and treated. Left untreated,
however, asthma can lead to permanent lung damage, a higher risk
of pulmonary disease, more severe asthma and more frequent attacks.
A history of untreated, severe asthma, frequent hospitalization,
lack of medication and stress is associated with increased risk
of death from the disease.
The suit charges that New York and various city and state agencies,
including the city's Human Resources Administration, Department
of Health and Department of Homeless Services, and the State Department
of Health and Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance, fail
to provide early and periodic screening, diagnosis and medical
treatment as mandated by federal Medicaid legislation enacted
in 1965.
The city is obligated to screen Medicaid-eligible children
for asthma and other chronic diseases; to provide diagnosis and
medical treatment services; to improve or correct conditions that
worsen asthma; to provide health education to children and their
families; and to help in the scheduling of medical appointments
and provide transportation to and from the doctor's office when
necessary. According to the legal brief filed in the suit, Defendants
have failed to provide these mandated services to plaintiffs and
to other vulnerable, homeless children in the class plaintiffs
seek to represent.
The lawsuit illustrates the conditions facing thousands of
children by detailing the experiences of the four named plaintiffs.
Dajour B., for instance, is 19 months old, lives with his mother,
father and sister in a city shelter, and was diagnosed with asthma
when he was 10 months old.
The family had been staying with Dajour's great grandmother
but had to move because of severe overcrowding. A cat as well
as cockroaches in the apartment were aggravating the infant's
asthma. The family applied for emergency shelter at the city's
Emergency Assistance Unit.
Dajour's family was denied shelter on the basis that they could
return to his great grandmother's home. While appealing this decision,
they have been placed in a number of temporary locations. At none
of these was Dajour screened, diagnosed or treated for asthma.
Despite the fact that his mother has informed shelter personnel
at every point of his condition, the family has received no assistance
or even any information on treatment.
At one facility the family was forced to walk up and down seven
flights of stairs because the elevators did not work. This exertion,
as well as roaches and rats in the shelter, all worsened Dajour's
asthma. He had to be rushed to the hospital by ambulance and shuttled
back and forth between the facility and the emergency room for
three days and nights.
Although covered by Medicaid, Dajour has received no treatment
within the shelter system. His most recent asthma attack occurred
in February, when his fever reached 105 degrees.
The suit demands a court injunction mandating that the city
and state agencies satisfy the specific requirements of early
and periodic screening, diagnosis and medical treatment, as spelled
out in guidelines issued by the National Institutes of Health
and the American Academy of Pediatrics for an effective asthma
management plan.
Gretchen Buchenholz, Executive Director of the Association
to Benefit Children, issued a statement on the lawsuit which warned
that Unless New York acts now to provide the kind of outreach
and treatment that has been mandated for decades, more lives will
be jeopardized, more children will waste away because they are
too ill to play with friends, too debilitated to attend school
and unable ultimately to find their breath.... New York's homeless
children with asthma are being denied the opportunity for a normal
childhood. They are often hospitalized unnecessarily. Children
are allowed to get sicker and sicker because there is no program
in place that ensures early diagnosis and supervised treatment.
The medical and human costs of ignoring asthma far outweigh the
costs of providing routine preventive care. This is an expensive
and damaging practice.
See Also:
Social
Issues & Inequality in America
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |