A 62 year old male was released
from custody to find himself homeless in Barnsley. Barnsley council referred him to Bradford
Cyrenians.
He had a past history of using heroin and
crack, and was street
drinking alcohol daily when he came to Bradford. He was evicted from Cyrenians for anti-social
behaviour and presenting
intoxicated.
Bradford Cold weather provision placed
him in InnChurches.
Housing Options then placed him in a B&B
in Shipley
but due to his drinking and antisocial
behaviour he was evicted.
I picked him up on street outreach and
made a referral to Hope Housing; he was accepted and moved into a property in November 2014.
The policy at the property was for clients to
leave at 8.30am and not return until 5.30pm. During this time he
started to drink daily, commit shop theft and smoke legal highs. He was also being financially abused. His life was
spiralling out of control; his physical and mental health were a major
concern.
We attended at the Piccadilly project but he did not
want to engage. Together we worked put a payday plan to protect him from being financially
abused on pay days and to prioritise his needs according to where he wanted to
be in the future. Payday would often lead to being admitted to A & E, regularly
discharging himself before he was seen or given appropriate treatment.
He was diagnosed with Hepatitis C and the
hospital wanted him to start treatment.
He also had epilepsy, was diabetic, had undergone a triple heart bypass,
suffered from high blood pressure and had recently experienced a mini stoke.
I moved him
to Cyrenians and worked along side his
keyworker. He continued with the
payday plan which was successful
- this was measurable by less 999
calls, ambulance call outs and A & E attendances. He was still being financially and physically
abused however, and
this resulted in him being admitted to hospital with fractured ribs and
pneumonia.
The payday plan helped him to form
a routine of paying two weekly top-up's to Cyrenians and two weeks in advance at
Unity Café for breakfast and dinners. This was a safe place for him;
he started to eat regular meals and it encouraged him to remain alcohol free
and attend The Vault Café groups.
The dilemma was finding appropriate
supported accommodation for an elderly and physically poorly man where he could continue his
sobriety. I spoke to the manager at Peel Park House - a new housing
project. I took him for a viewing and assessment, he was accepted and
moved in
four weeks later.
He now has
a small contained fully-fitted and furnished new flat, with 24 hour support,
financial support and alcohol support on site. At the point of closing my
client he had been alcohol free for the past
6 weeks, was
not offending, is maintaining his property and buying items for his home on paydays. Although his health was still a concern he
stated he felt safe and able to address his issues now.
His words to me were "you have moved
me into a palace".
Moira Mbye (ARCH Alcohol Outreach Worker)