Steve Lopez: 'Very aggressive treatment' on the streets of Skid Row from a renegade M.D.
LOS ANGELES -- The team gathered at 4th and Crocker streets and headed south, into the blue-tented netherworld of social collapse, armed with life-saving drug-overdose kits and injectable, long-acting anti-psychotic medication.
"We're trying very aggressive treatment on the streets," said Dr. Susan Partovi. "Housing definitely saves your life, but there's a small sub-group of people who won't accept housing because of their mental illness."
She figures that if she administers medication that lasts a month and can help stabilize patients — with their consent — they've got a chance.
"They don't think there's anything wrong, and they think they don't need housing," Partovi said. "They don't think rationally, and so once you treat their delusions and their irrationality, they start to realize, 'Oh, I do need resources.' "
Partovi, who began practicing street medicine in 2007 in Santa Monica, has never been shy about her lack of patience with the official response to the entrenched humanitarian crisis. In 2017, I shadowed her as she walked through Skid Row with County Supervisor , advocating for broader authority to assist those in obvious acute mental and physical distress, even if
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