The health of homeless people in high-income countries: descriptive epidemiology, health consequences, and clinical and policy recommendations

Reference
Volume: 
384
Issue: 
9953
pp: 
1529-1540
2014
In the European Union, more than 400 000 individuals are homeless on any one night and more than 600 000 are homeless in the USA. The causes of homelessness are an interaction between individual and structural factors. Individual factors include poverty, family problems, and mental health and substance misuse problems. The availability of low-cost housing is thought to be the most important structural determinant for homelessness. Homeless people have higher rates of premature mortality than the rest of the population, especially from suicide and unintentional injuries, and an increased prevalence of a range of infectious diseases, mental disorders, and substance misuse. We discuss several recommendations to improve the surveillance of morbidity and mortality in homeless people.
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