Department of Public and Ecosystem Health, Cornell University, S2005 Schurman Hall, Ithaca, NY, 14850, USA.
Department of Political Science, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Feb;11(1):326-338. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01521-9. Epub 2023 Feb 16.
Homelessness is a public health crisis affecting millions of Americans every year, with severe consequences for health ranging from infectious diseases to adverse behavioral health outcomes to significantly higher all-cause mortality. A primary constraint of addressing homelessness is a lack of effective and comprehensive data on rates of homelessness and who experiences homelessness. While other types of health services research and policy are based around comprehensive health datasets to successfully evaluate outcomes and link individuals with services and policies, there are few such datasets that report homelessness.
Gathering archived data from the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, we created a unique dataset of annual rates of homelessness, nationally, as measured by persons accessing homeless shelter systems, for 11 years (2007-2017, including the Great Recession and prior to the start of the 2020 pandemic). Responding to the need to measure and address racial and ethnic disparities in homelessness, the dataset reports annual rates of homelessness across HUD selected, Census-based racial and ethnic categories.
Between 2007 and 2017, across all types of sheltered homelessness, whether individual, family, or total, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander individuals and families were far more likely to experience homelessness than non-Hispanic White individuals and families. Particularly concerning about the rates of homelessness among these populations is the persistent and increasing nature of these disparities across the entire study period.
While homelessness is a public health problem, the hazard of experiencing homelessness is not uniformly distributed across different populations. Because homelessness is such a strong social determinant of health and risk factor across multiple health domains, it deserves the same careful annual tracking and evaluation by public health stakeholders as other areas of health and health care.
无家可归是影响美国数百万人的公共卫生危机,对健康造成严重后果,从传染病到不良行为健康结果,再到全因死亡率显著升高。解决无家可归问题的主要限制因素是缺乏有关无家可归率和无家可归者的有效和全面数据。虽然其他类型的健康服务研究和政策都是围绕综合健康数据集展开的,以成功评估结果并将个人与服务和政策联系起来,但很少有此类数据集报告无家可归问题。
我们从美国住房和城市发展部收集存档数据,创建了一个独特的数据集,该数据集记录了 11 年来(2007-2017 年,包括大衰退和 2020 年大流行之前),通过无家可归者收容系统获得服务的人数来衡量的全国无家可归率。为了满足衡量和解决无家可归者中的种族和族裔差异的需求,该数据集按美国人口普查局选定的种族和族裔类别报告了年度无家可归率。
在 2007 年至 2017 年期间,在所有类型的有庇护的无家可归者中,无论是个人、家庭还是总数,黑人和美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民以及夏威夷原住民和太平洋岛民个人和家庭经历无家可归的可能性远远高于非西班牙裔白人个人和家庭。这些人群中无家可归率特别令人担忧的是,在整个研究期间,这些差异一直存在且在不断扩大。
虽然无家可归是一个公共卫生问题,但经历无家可归的危险并非在不同人群中均匀分布。由于无家可归是健康和多个健康领域风险因素的重要社会决定因素,因此公共卫生利益相关者应该像关注其他健康和医疗保健领域一样,对其进行认真的年度跟踪和评估。