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Specifically, we offer brief comments on four categories of policy responses, which align with the stages of a trajectory of homelessness: addressing root causes, preventing homelessness, providing services, and facilitating sustained exits from homelessness.
Two of five veterans who screened positive for any housing instability were living in a homeless situation, including doubling up with friends or family (31.1 percent), staying in a shelter or on the street (7.6 percent), or staying in a motel or hotel (3.0 percent).
We compare the race and ethnicity of those experiencing homelessness to the general population and to people in poverty, and we also explore how race and ethnicity are associated with housing outcomes. Interviews with 195 individuals of color explore pathways into homelessness and drivers of outcomes.
Our results deepen the research community’s understanding of K–12 homeless students by making several contributions: (1) we describe the schools and neighborhoods of students experiencing homelessness, (2) we assess the spatial clustering of students in schools, and (3) we document homeless students’ residential and school mobility and ...
This article explores a unique approach to addressing the health needs of a rural homeless population using core principles relevant to community-based participatory research (CBPR).
The purpose of this article is to identify and map the outcomes and effects on individuals and society when people who are homeless are provided with stable, secure accommodation.
Five databases including PubMed, ProQuest, Cochrane Library, OVID, and Google Scholar were searched using homelessness, psychosocial interventions, mental ill, residential mental health facility, and case management for experimental studies published from January 2000 to December 2022.
First, in the aggregate, they undermine the notion of a stable homeless population, pointing instead to a dynamic one constantly reshaped by high turnover. Second, they encourage a more refined, granular examination of individual-level engagement with homelessness.
Despite reports that over 1.3 million school-age children (ages 5–18) were homeless in 2019, little is known about the effects of homelessness on their overall health and well-being.
In this article, the authors report findings about where youth actually stay when experiencing homelessness, what precipitated their current experience of homelessness, which coping strategies they use, and what services they need.