Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, 60 White Squirrel Way, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Western University, School of Occupational Therapy, 1201 Western Road, London, Ontario, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 May;348:116831. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116831. Epub 2024 Mar 29.
Service restrictions refer to temporary or permanent bans of individuals from a program or an organization's services, and are widely used in emergency shelter systems. Limited research exists on how service restrictions unfold and their impacts on people experiencing homelessness. This qualitative study used in-depth interviews with timeline mapping to examine the antecedents and consequences of service restrictions from emergency shelters among people experiencing homelessness in two cities in Ontario, Canada. A total of 49 people experiencing homelessness who had been restricted from an emergency shelter program in the past year were recruited and included in the study analysis. A pragmatic and integrative approach was used for data analysis that involved the development of meta-matrices to identify prominent and divergent perspectives and experiences with regard to service restriction antecedents and consequences. Study findings underscored that service restrictions were often the result of violence and aggression, primarily between service users. There were regional differences in other service restriction reasons, including substance use and possession. Service restrictions affected the shelter status of almost all participants, with many subsequently experiencing unsheltered homelessness, and cycling through institutional health, social, and criminal justice services (i.e., institutional circuitry). Other health and social consequences included substance use relapses and hospitalizations; cold-related injuries due to post-restriction unsheltered homelessness; suicidality; food insecurity; diminished contact with support network and connections; and intense feelings of anger, fear, and hopelessness. Overall, the study findings advance our understanding of the role of homeless services in pathways into unsheltered homelessness and institutional circuitry, which raise critical questions about how to mitigate the harms associated with service restrictions, while concurrently facilitating safety and upholding the rights of people experiencing homelessness and emergency shelter staff.
服务限制是指对个人在计划或组织服务中的临时或永久禁止,广泛应用于紧急避难系统中。关于服务限制的展开方式及其对无家可归者的影响,相关研究有限。本定性研究使用时间线映射的深入访谈,考察了加拿大安大略省两个城市的无家可归者在紧急避难所中因服务限制而产生的前因后果。共有 49 名在过去一年中因服务限制而被紧急避难所项目拒之门外的无家可归者参与了这项研究。采用实用主义和综合的方法进行数据分析,包括开发元矩阵,以确定与服务限制前因后果相关的突出和不同的观点和经验。研究结果强调,服务限制通常是暴力和攻击的结果,主要发生在服务使用者之间。在其他服务限制原因方面存在地区差异,包括药物使用和占有。服务限制几乎影响了所有参与者的庇护状况,其中许多人随后经历了无家可归,并且在机构卫生、社会和刑事司法服务(即机构电路)之间循环。其他健康和社会后果包括药物使用复发和住院治疗;因限制后无家可归而导致的与寒冷有关的伤害;自杀意念;粮食不安全;与支持网络和联系的接触减少;以及强烈的愤怒、恐惧和绝望感。总的来说,研究结果增进了我们对无家可归服务在无家可归和机构电路中的作用的理解,这引发了关于如何减轻与服务限制相关的危害,同时促进安全和维护无家可归者和紧急避难所工作人员权利的问题。