Healthcare Quarterly
Warmth When It Matters Most: Addressing the Overnight Needs of Homeless Emergency Room Patients
Melissa McCallum, Jennifer Bonner, Leslie Gillies, Brooke Cowell, Alim Pardhan and Andriana Lukich
Abstract
Amid a growing housing and homelessness crisis in Hamilton, Ontario, an innovative four-way alliance responded with urgency and compassion to address a critical service gap: the overnight discharge of homeless patients from hospital emergency departments. Spearheaded by the Greater Hamilton Health Network Ontario Health Team, this cross-sector initiative united healthcare, social services, education and community partners to create a warming program at The Hub – a trauma-informed, low-barrier warming space operating nightly throughout the winter. Within one week, a tri-partner funding model was launched, supported by a streamlined hospital discharge process using a single-call system. Staffed by students in medicine, social work and policing, The Hub provided a unique blend of shelter, stabilization and support services, while equipping future professionals with hands-on interdisciplinary training. The program resulted in 3,278 visits and redirected 307 emergency room discharges to a safe, dignified space – freeing hospital beds and easing moral distress among healthcare workers. Key takeaways include: the power of rapid cross-sector alignment, the effectiveness of integrated discharge pathways and the replicability of student-led care models rooted in dignity and trust. This initiative demonstrates how community-driven collaboration can bridge healthcare and housing, offering a practical framework for organizations and municipalities seeking sustainable, human-centred solutions to homelessness and system strain.
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