Health Center Offers Access, Close Proximity for Student Veterans

Primary Care Services Provided By Pat Walker

By Alex Nicoll

The Razorback Reporter

The Pat Walker Health Center could offer more convenient and immediate service for student veterans who are seeking care than other medical providers in the community, the center executive director said.

Mary Alice Serafini, executive director of Pat Walker, said she thinks that student veterans would choose the health center over the Veterans Health Care System of the Ozarks hospital  

because the convenience of being on campus allows students to build relationships with medical providers.

“Real often in medical or counseling, once a relationship is established, that sometimes can be helpful for a student to know who you are going to see and how you are going to interact and those kinds of things,” Serafini said.

All services provided by the health center are offered to all students, including student veterans, Serafini said.

“The one that people probably know the most about is primary health care,” Serafini said. “For some veterans, it makes sense to use us; for other veterans, it makes sense to use the VA or other providers in the community. It depends on their circumstances.”

The health center provides outpatient care, which means patients can leave the center after they receive help and do not have to stay the night, according to the center’s website. Some examples of this care include dealing with acute care injuries, chronic care injuries and illnesses and providing a treatment room where patients can get cuts sewn up and casts for broken bones.

The center does not provide emergency services, she said.

“We would like for them to go straight to the ER and not stop here because it would delay care,” Serafini said.

Student veterans, like other students, pay the UA health fee of $7.25 per credit hour. Coupled with veterans probably being insured by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, that credit hour fee means “using medical services here is usually straight forward,” Serafini said.

Some of the staff at the center have more experience dealing with veterans than others, including medical providers and individuals on the nursing and laboratory staff, Serafini said.

“That expertise is always appreciated,” she said.

One service the center does not offer is any form of physical therapy treatment, Serafini said.

“We’ve explored having physical therapy here, but it’s not practical,” she said. “Physical therapists come to us and would love to be a part of Pat Walker, but when they look at how it would work financially for them, they don’t see it very inviting.”

If there is a service a student needs, but the center cannot provide, physicians at the center can refer students to “people we know can help with them with their assistance,” she said.

The health center is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday and Friday, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday.

“Our whole point for (student veterans) is to know that we are accessible,” Serafini said.

 

7hills Homeless Center Extends Outreach to Veterans

By Veronica Torres

The Razorback Reporter

Veterans who served active military duty and need assistance in getting temporary housing can turn to 7hills Homeless Center in Fayetteville.

The 16-year-old non-profit organization has goals of “ending homelessness and poverty with education, opportunities and hope,” according to the website.

“The ultimate goal is to develop a continuum of services and housing programs that will allow us to assist all clients and families, no matter their individual challenges and life circumstances,” according to 7hillscenter.org.

Beyond that goal, 7hills staff work with veterans in Washington, Benton and Madison counties.

Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) is aimed to promote housing among low-income and veteran families. The idea is to assist veterans and veterans’ families in transitioning to permanent housing, according to 7hillscenter.org.

SSVF offers short-term services for veterans, including case management, moving and storage costs maximum of three months, short-term rent assistance and/or arrears, short-term utility assistance and/or arrears, housing search assistance, security deposit once per two years, utility deposits once per three-year period, money management skills, job readiness assistance, childcare, community referrals, assistance obtaining public benefits and emergency supplies, according to 7hillscenter.org.

Seven Hills services are different for each individual.

“Homelessness is a really unique situation,” said Steven Mills, chief operating officer for the 7hills Homeless Center in Fayetteville, Arkansas. “Most of the homeless individuals don’t want to be homeless.”

There are eligibility requirements for the SSVF program. They must be from a veteran household, either being a veteran or a household where the head of household, or the spouse of the head of household, is a veteran. The veteran must have served in active military, naval, or air force and was discharged or released under non-dishonorable conditions. They must have very low-income meaning it would not exceed 50 percent of area median pre-tax income. And they must occupy permanent housing, meaning they are experiencing homelessness or at risk of losing permanent housing, but not SSVF assistance, according to 7hillscenter.org.

“I wouldn’t say there is a high volume of students coming through,” Mills said in an interview.

“Of the homeless population 37 percent are veterans in northwest Arkansas,” according to 7hillscenter.org.

“One of the No. 1 reasons for someone becoming homeless is because just a lack of a support system,” Mills said.

Affordable Housing Available for Veterans

By Leah Nelson 

The Razorback Reporter

The Fayetteville Housing Authority has four buildings which helps house people who need assistance with finding an affordable place to rent.

The housing authority has three programs with 878 rental units for people with low income and is on a first come, first serve bases.

The Fayetteville Housing Authority has a few veterans living in their four buildings but they’re either elderly or have a disability. Most veterans the housing authority helps are in the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Veterans Association Supportive Housing program.

The VA provides veterans with health care, mental health care and substance use counseling to help them in their recovery process and their ability to maintain housing in the community, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs website.

The program is for homeless veterans who are brought to the housing authority by the VA after the veterans’ case has been handled.

“They provide the supportive and we provide the housing,” said Joy Hunnicutt, the section 8 housing specialist at the Fayetteville Housing Authority.

Veterans work with case managers from the VA to help them pick a place to live if they meet certain requirements. If they are a registered sex offender they are not eligible for the program. The Fayetteville Housing Authority houses 112 veterans through HUD VASH vouchers, Hunnicutt said.

Case managers help veterans with their problems and get jobs, so they eventually earn a high enough income and they do not need to be in the affordable housing system anymore.

“Income isn’t initially an issue but veterans eventually go off the program because their income exceeds our maximum, low income requirement,” said Deniece Smiley the director of the Fayetteville Housing Authority.

The veterans have 120 days to use the voucher from the housing authority in order to receive an affordable housing rental. It takes veterans about one to two months to find a suitable one-bedroom apartment but they usually find a place quickly, Hunnicutt said.

“The difficult thing is that every veteran has a different situation they’re going through, so the time frame is different as well,” Hunnicutt said.

Campus, NWA Organizations Push for Suicide Awareness

By Lindsey Guimont

The Razorback Reporter

More than $40,000 has been raised toward awareness of suicide and research for prevention, organizers said this week after a successful event in Bentonville.

The Arkansas chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention presented the fourth annual Northwest Arkansas Out of the Darkness Walk Sunday. The event attracted loss survivors to commemorate those they lost to death by suicide and to promote prevention. Participants released yellow balloons at the end of the walk.

“We currently stand at over $40,000 raised and we have until the end of the year to raise more money,” Maureen Cover-Bryan, a loss survivor and American Foundation for Suicide Prevention volunteer, said in an interview.

Cover-Bryan participates in the foundation because she lost her son, Colin Bryan to death by suicide July 25, 2011, she said. Colin Bryan was an Army veteran paratrooper who was honorably discharged. He was being treated for mental illness up until his time of death.

“He was under care of a physician, a psychiatrist, under the care of the VA and he was receiving counseling,” Cover-Bryan said. “We knew he had suicidal thoughts and ideation and he was being medicated, yet still he had lots of problems and had been in and out of facilities for the last seven or eight months of his life.”

Cover-Bryan volunteers with the foundation, because they are the largest private provider of research funds for suicide, she said.

The Northwest Arkansas Out of the Darkness Walk was one of 320 such events nationwide. Organizations in northwest Arkansas are planning for more events throughout September. The Veterans Health Care System of the Ozarks presented an event specifically for veterans, Sept. 9.

“We partnered with Arkansas Freedom Fund. It was a bike ride because one of the things that my passion here in Fort Smith is to get veterans involved in a cycling group. We have a cycling group named Project Hero Fort Smith,” said Ashley Moffett, suicide prevention coordinator for Veteran’s Health Care System of the Ozarks in Fayetteville and Fort Smith.

During the bike ride, Moffett said, they set up booths with awareness information and goodie bags with the Veterans Crisis Line phone number (800-273-8255). She also will set up similar booths at events throughout the month of September.

The University of Arkansas community is joining the effort to raise awareness and provide services for suicide prevention.

The Pat Walker Health Center will promote Let’s Talk, a program introduced on campus during the second week of September, said Michele Cooper, suicide prevention coordinator for Counseling and Psychological Services. Let’s Talk will be available in Bell Engineering on Tuesdays and the Arkansas Union on Fridays for students to be able to drop in and have a consultation with clinicians.

“It’s not traditional therapy, but it makes CAPS more accessible to everyone,” Cooper said.

Cooper and Counseling and Psychological Services also will participate in the Lane Marrs 5K Memorial Run in Fayetteville Sept. 16. They will have a table with officials from the Dean of Students offices and UofA Cares to provide information and support for anyone who needs it, she said.