Rutgers Law School Medical-Legal Partnership Helps Residents Resolve Care Issues

MLP attorney Jeremy Spiegel consults with Camden Coalition nurse care coordinator Ebony Hailey.  Photo Credit: Camden Coalition of Healthcare Providers

CAMDEN, N.J. — The Rutgers Law School Medical-Legal Partnership (MLP) has received a $50,000 grant from the Rowan University/Rutgers–Camden Board of Governors recently to help expand their program according to a press release.

Working alongside the Camden Coalition’s nurses, social workers, and community health staff, MLP attorney Jeremy Spiegel handles a variety of legal issues, including assisting in clearing up old cases of unpaid fines and fees, helping clients avoid eviction from their homes, and preventing employers from wrongfully limiting employees’ disability benefits.

When a patient has legal issues that are a barrier to improved health, Camden Coalition social workers refer the patient to the MLP attorney to help resolve the issues.  

Unresolved legal issues can add to the stress that vulnerable patients are already experiencing, which could affect their medical conditions and their ability to make decisions, says Spiegel.

“Sometimes, patients don’t even recognize that the issues they have and the barriers they confront are actually of a legal nature,” says Spiegel.

Since the partnership between Rutgers Law School and the Camden Coalition began in November 2017, the MLP has assisted 60 patients, obtained more than $10,000 in reductions of fines and fees, and secured more than $10,000 in disability benefits for patients.

“The Joint Board’s funding has been crucial to our ability to build the MLP and expand the type and number of cases that we can take,” Kimberly Mutcherson, Rutgers Law School co-dean said. “Their support helps us bring needed legal services to the people of Camden.”

Camden Coalition care team members meet with complex care patients at Cooper, Lourdes, and other area hospitals to help coordinate patient care. The team guides patients to access the care they need, such as connecting them with a primary-care physician or a specialist, or arranging transportation to get them to appointments.

Ashley Maddison, a recent Rutgers Law graduate, is joining the MLP as an additional attorney to handle patients’ legal matters, and conduct advocacy work for reforms in health care. Through a fellowship from Equal Justice Works, Maddison will be working with the MLP for two years.

“There are many patients in the Camden area with legal needs, and we want to serve a greater number,” says Spiegel.

Future plans for the MLP are to create a clinical program housed at Rutgers Law School in Camden to have faculty-supervised student-lawyers work with clients and to offer opportunities for Rutgers–Camden students from such disciplines as nursing and social work to participate in the MLP.

The MLP also receives support from the Holman Auto Group.