Hannah C. Decker (
Laura A. Graham, Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Healthcare System, Palo Alto, California.
Health Aff (Millwood). 2024 Feb;43(2):234-241. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2023.01003.
Cancer is a leading cause of death in older unhoused adults. We assessed whether being unhoused, gaining housing, or losing housing in the year after cancer diagnosis is associated with poorer survival compared with being continuously housed. We examined all-cause survival in more than 100,000 veterans diagnosed with lung, colorectal, and breast cancer during the period 2011-20. Five percent were unhoused at the time of diagnosis, of whom 21 percent gained housing over the next year; 1 percent of veterans housed at the time of diagnosis lost housing. Continuously unhoused veterans and veterans who lost their housing had poorer survival after lung and colorectal cancer diagnosis compared with those who were continuously housed. There was no survival difference between veterans who gained housing after diagnosis and veterans who were continuously housed. These findings support policies to prevent and end homelessness in people after cancer diagnosis, to improve health outcomes.
癌症是导致无家可归的老年人死亡的主要原因之一。我们评估了与持续居住相比,在癌症诊断后的一年中无家可归、获得住房或失去住房是否与较差的生存结果相关。我们研究了在 2011-20 年期间被诊断患有肺癌、结直肠癌和乳腺癌的超过 100000 名退伍军人的全因生存情况。诊断时无家可归的占 5%,其中 21%在接下来的一年中获得了住房;诊断时居住的退伍军人中有 1%失去了住房。与持续居住的退伍军人相比,持续无家可归的退伍军人和失去住房的退伍军人在肺癌和结直肠癌诊断后的生存结果较差。与持续居住的退伍军人相比,诊断后获得住房的退伍军人和持续居住的退伍军人之间没有生存差异。这些发现支持在癌症诊断后预防和结束无家可归者无家可归的政策,以改善健康结果。