Stories To Inform & Inspire
In many respects, the American system for caregiving, broadly conceived, is structured in two tiers. Those in the upper tier can afford care or have employer-provided insurance. These individuals and families have access to medical, mental health, educational, and spiritual services and support. They are also statistically less likely to need resources and support that those individuals and families who make up the bottom tier.
Those who cannot afford services and support are, on the other hand, much more likely to benefit from greater access. We at the Cornerstone Foundation have made it our mission to fill the gap in the system by subsidizing services and care where it’s most needed—where it will help mend, strengthen, and build lives.
Read on to be informed and inspired. Each of these stories is factual in every respect save one: only the names have been changed.
When Jaclyn cut her wrists in a desperate cry for help. Her grandmother and legal guardian, Latoya, quickly rushed her to the hospital. Jaclyn, who was sixteen at the time, would get the very best care that money could provide… until someone asked about insurance. Latoya would later share with her pastor and his wife, “Everything changed when I told them we didn’t have insurance.”
Jaclyn would be admitted to the local psychiatric hospital for observation, then discharged a few days later. While a patient there, she witnessed aspects of a system she hopes to never see again. Now Jaclyn finds herself strongly motivated to get the help she needs to overcome her mental and emotional challenges. With her grandmother’s help, she would make an appointment to see a Christian psychiatrist. This doctor prescribed medications to help stabilize Jaclyn’s mood and manage her anxiety. Only there was no way they could afford it. “I didn’t have the $289,” Latoya told her pastor’s wife. “What are we supposed to do now?”