Bailey-Boushay House

Bailey-Boushay House, founded June 24, 1992,[1] is an inpatient long-term care facility and outpatient day health program for people with HIV/AIDS in Seattle, Washington, US.

[2] The facility was named after Seattle publisher Thatcher Bailey, a founding donor, and his partner Frank Boushay, who died of AIDS in 1989.

[7] In the early 1990s, the photographers Saul Bromberger and Sandra Hoover documented the daily life of Bailey-Boushay patients, and their work was published in Mother Jones magazine on World AIDS Day in 2014.

[8] Every year on Valentine's Day, Bailey-Boushay House used to place hundreds of red balloons on the outside of their facility to officially thank the community for their support.

[10] The outpatient day health program serves patients with HIV who are homeless, and/or capable of living independently in the community but require medication management and social support.