OMEGA HOUSE In 1986 Eleanor Munger, a retired 76-year-old Montessori schoolteacher, was visiting patients at Jeff Davis hospital with other members of Christ Church Cathedral. While there she encountered a group of patients that had been diagnosed with the newly identified HIV virus. Instructed to not visit them she wanted to know more. They were
mostly gay white males, horrifically sick. Their resources spent on
medical bills, many had been ostracized because they were gay and because
of the disease. It was so terrible that even some members of the hospital
staff would avoid contact with them, but they had no place else to go
and would stay there until they died. Her courageous pioneering effort became Omega House, the first residential hospice in Texas, a safe haven for terminally ill AIDS patients. It opened as a four-bed, entirely volunteer-run home for people who could no longer be helped by the traditional medical community, and often had no family or loved ones to care for them in their final days. Dr Robert Awe, the medical director over pulmonary at Ben Taub Hospital, saw many of the HIV patients with Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP.) He volunteered to train the volunteers and became the doctor on call. The concept of hospice
was relatively new, Omega House applied and received the first license
with the state of Texas - License #0001 for a Special Care Facility.
During this same time Bering Memorial United Methodist Church was also
feeling the negative impact that HIV/AIDS was having on the community
as well as its congregation. Holding several funerals a week for those
lost to the disease motivated them to action. In 1999, the two agencies
joined forces to offer a holistic approach to care for those living
with HIV/AIDS and formed Bering Omega Community Services. This union
enabled Bering Omega Community Services to offer a wide range of healthcare
and social services through a seamless delivery system for indigent,
under-served and disenfranchised clients in the greater Houston Area. In 2016 Bering
Omega became Avenue 360)
|