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Challenges Faced by People Experiencing Homelessness

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People who become homeless face many challenges. Among the most severe is high risk of mortality, a risk that is especially marked for younger adults. Excess mortality for younger adults comes from drug overdoses, along with excess suicide, homicide, and infectious disease. Older adults tend to die from the same causes (such as cancer and heart disease) as older adults more generally—but 10–15 years sooner (Baggett et al., 2013; Fazel, Geddes, & Kushel, 2014). Unsurprisingly, people who are unsheltered have higher mortality than people who use shelters, and in a study in Massachusetts that followed the same group of people over 10 years (known as a cohort sample), they had 10 times higher mortality than the overall population (Roncarati et al., 2018). People studied while homeless have high rates of infectious diseases, chronic diseases, psychiatric and substance use disorders, and injuries, some due to victimization (Fazel et al., 2014). Across diagnostic categories, they get sick and are admitted to hospitals at earlier ages (Adams, Rosenheck, Gee, Seibyl, & Kushel, 2007).

Rates of disability among people who experience homelessness are also extremely high. HUD reports rates of disability from all causes, including physical and cognitive disabilities and those due to substance abuse and mental illness. In 2017, the share of sheltered individuals with disabilities was 49%. This is greater than the share of people with disabilities in the U.S. population with incomes below poverty, 32% (Henry, Bishop, et al., 2018). Levels of disabilities are a bit higher for veterans (59%) and substantially lower for adults in families (22%). Both those figures are still higher than in the general population, or even the population in poverty (16% for families).

The data on disability (based on everyone who used shelter over the course of the year) do not distinguish between disabilities associated with mental illness, substance abuse, developmental disability, cognitive impairment, and physical causes.21 Nor does HUD look carefully at the way disabilities are identified by the program staff that report data into the information system that is the basis for the HUD estimates. But we think the basic point is accurate: about half (51%) of adults who experience sheltered homelessness over the course of a year as individuals do not have any disability, and more than three quarters (78%) of those who are part of a family with children do not have a disability.

Studies of mental health and substance abuse problems among people experiencing homelessness find wildly different rates. For example, a systematic review of mental health diagnoses among homeless individuals (excluding families) in wealthy countries, primarily in Europe, found prevalence rates for psychotic illness ranging from 2.8 to 42.3% and of major depression ranging from 0.0 to 40.9%. The best estimates from this review, considering factors such as the size of samples, are that among unaccompanied adults experiencing homelessness, 12.7% currently have a psychotic illness, 11.4% major depression, 23.1% a personality disorder, 37.9% alcohol dependence, and 24.4% drug dependence. Slightly higher rates of alcohol dependence and slightly lower rates of major depression are found in mainland Europe compared to other wealthy countries (Fazel, Khosla, Doll, & Geddes, 2008).

Almost all of the studies were cross‐sectional—that is, they sampled a group of people who are homeless at a particular point in time, rather than a sample of all people who become homeless over a period of time. We have already shown that studies describing people at a particular point in time provide a different picture from studies showing who becomes homeless over a longer time period. (For example, the proportion of families who are homeless on a given night is larger than the proportion homeless over the course of a year because families stay longer, on average.) Why might that matter for understanding rates of disability among people experiencing homelessness?

Compared to all people who ever become homeless, those who are counted in a point‐in‐time survey include a higher proportion of people who remain homeless for a long time or return repeatedly to that state, that is, of people with chronic patterns of homelessness. People who became homeless a month or 6 months before the survey but who returned to housing quickly are not included; others who became homeless at the same time but remained so are counted. To the extent that problems such as mental illness or substance abuse make it difficult to extricate oneself from homelessness, estimates of those problems will be magnified in cross‐sectional studies (Phelan & Link, 1999). A PIT count is an example of a cross‐sectional study. It minimizes estimates of the number of people who experience homelessness but maximizes estimates of their problems.

To illustrate, we return to the typologies of homelessness for individuals and families and focus on Philadelphia, where researchers matched records of shelter use to records of treatment for substance abuse (Culhane et al., 2007; Kuhn & Culhane, 1998). For individuals, fewer than 10% of people who entered shelter were long stayers, but they used just over half of the shelter days. That means that, on any given day, one would be likely to find that just over half of the shelter residents were long‐term users, and the long stayers and episodic users of shelters had more problems such as substance abuse than the transitional (short‐stay) shelter users. Among all individuals who entered shelter over 28 months, 37% reported substance problems, and 29% had received substance abuse treatment from a publicly funded source. If a cross‐sectional survey had used records for the same Philadelphia shelters, it would likely have found 54% with self‐reports of substance problems and 33% with treatment records.

As we noted earlier, studies of people in the midst of an episode of homelessness arguably catch them at the worst point in their lives. Returning to housing can reduce mental health and substance problems. This point is illustrated by the Family Options Study of housing and service interventions for homeless families, which we will discuss more in Chapter 3 on how to end homelessness for people who experience it. That study found that as families began to stabilize, rates of serious psychological distress, alcohol dependence, and drug abuse went down (Shinn, Gubits, & Dunton, 2018). Further, giving families offers of ongoing rental subsidies that held their housing costs to 30% of their income not only ended homelessness for many but also reduced their rates of psychological distress, substance use, and experiences of domestic violence compared to families who received the usual care available in their communities (Gubits et al., 2015, 2016). Distress and substance abuse, like homelessness itself, are not permanent traits, but instead states that can be influenced by environmental circumstances. Just as hardship and shelter rules can shape family composition, hardship and homelessness can sometimes precipitate psychological distress or substance abuse. Although addictions lead some people into homelessness, others do not hit the bottle until they hit the street. And at least for families, housing is an important mental health “treatment.”

Some observers consider the challenges faced by people experiencing homelessness as a sufficient explanation for that state. Often these observers focus on challenges they may consider moral failings such as substance abuse. But the logic is faulty. College students have high rates of substance abuse; as with homeless adults, the favored substance is alcohol. But observers rarely claim that young people become college students because of their substance abuse. Some college students do in fact become homeless, but it is poverty and food insecurity rather than substance abuse that distinguishes them from their peers (Broton & Goldrick‐Rab, 2018). More nuanced explanations are necessary. Chapter 2 analyzes causes of homelessness.

In the Midst of Plenty

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