Addressing the Intersection of Homelessness and Health

Stephen Brown MSW LCSW
Director, Preventive Emergency Medicine
Director, Better Health Through Housing
Department of Emergency Medicine
Senior Director, Social & Behavioral Health Systems Transformation
Institute of Healthcare Delivery Design
University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System
sbbrown9@uic.edu
The Intersection of Homelessness & Health:
A Public Health Issue
 
Learning objectives
 
 
 
 
 
 
Disclosures: I have no relevant financial or non-
financial conflicts to report
 
 
D
escribe early mortality and poor health
outcomes associated with unstable housing and
homelessness, with a focus on unsheltered
homelessness.
It will also describe the broad trends occurring
across the country to decriminalize mental
illness and  substance use, with examples of
opportunities for diversion into treatment
instead of engagement with law enforcement
and incarceration.
P
rovide examples of where the legal
profession can advocate for  change.
 
“Homelessness is what happens when every other system fails”.
- Alex Fox, Mayday Trust, Leeds, United Kingdom
 
You could make many homelessness responses twice as
effective if you managed the system better, but the inclination
is always there to fund direct services. It’s inefficient. If you
want to shift the dial, fund the improvements to the systems”.
- Norman Suchar - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
 
Emergency Medicine: 
The Safety Net
Provider of Last Resort
Upstream systems failures land at our doorstep
 
Homelessness
 
Housing Programs
 
UI Health: Better Health Through Housing
 
Since 2015: Longest running hospital-to-supportive
housing program
UI Health has housed more than any other single
hospital (130)
Over $1.75M invested
 
Chicago & Cook County: Flexible Housing Pool
 
Healthcare, insurance, philanthropy and city-county
government financed 
consortium
Over $20M invested
Over 1,000 placed into permanent supportive
housing
 
The changing face of homelessness
 
If a person were asked to describe the homeless,
they might talk about a middle-aged man on a
street corner with a bottle of whisky in a brown
paper sack. Although this stereotype is true for
some, the population has shifted.
 
The changing face of homelessness
 
The face of homelessness is changing.  We are
seeing more people who have been pushed out
of their homes because of low wage jobs, 
rapidly
rising rents and 
unemployment.
One out of three Americans are 
living paycheck
to paycheck, and if they lost their job, couldn’t
pay their rent or mortgage.
62% of Americans have no emergency savings
for things like an emergency room visit or a $500
car repair.
 
What’s Driving the increase in homelessness
 
Financial insecurity
More people than ever are being housed – but an even higher number are
falling into homelessness
Rents are out of reach for many, and millions of affordable places have
disappeared
Zoning laws and local opposition make it hard to build housing for low-
income renters
Pandemic aid programs that helped keep many people housed are winding
down
 
 
https://www.npr.org/2023/07/12/1186856463/homelessness-rent-affordable-housing-encampments
 
The 3 types of homelessness
 
A time-oriented classification of the
homeless, based upon the length of time
they have been homeless.
Episodic
Chronic
 
Both individuals (48%) and families (52%)
who become homeless due to a housing,
health care, or other financial crisis.  They
come into the shelter system and stay
about three months and often move into
housing.  
50% are homeless less than 7
days.
Transitional
 
More individuals than families who
regularly go in and out of shelters. They
tend to be younger and leave shelters
when they get income or use shelters
seasonally.  
31% of foster care children
who age-out
 of the system will be
homeless in their twenties
 
Primarily individuals who have been
homeless for a year or more, or four times
in the last three years.  They tend to be
older with significant mental illness,
substance abuse and many have a chronic
medical condition(s). Chronically homeless
can be further divided into sheltered and
unsheltered status.
 
Typology
 
80%
 
10%
 
10%
 
Morbidity
 
56%
 
Trimorbidity
The combination of:
Complex Chronic Condition(s)
Substance Use Disorder
Severe Mental Illness
 
Etiologies include severe mental illness, PTSD, uncontrolled
seizure disorder, intellectual disability, traumatic brain injury
(TBI), dementia, hepatic encephalopathy & childhood lead
poisoning.
 
neurocog
A hidden epidemic: 72%
of the chronically
homeless have
neurocognitive deficits
 
Source: 
Stergiopoulos V, Cusi A, Bekele T, Skosireva A, Latimer E, Schutz C,
Fernando I, Rourke SB. Neurocognitive impairment in a large sample of homeless
adults with mental illness. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2015 Apr; 131(4): 256-268.
Nearly 
50%  
have evidence of
traumatic brain injury
 
Unsheltered homelessness were 25 times as likely to report
having all three of the following conditions concurrently
when compared to their sheltered peers:
P
hysical health condition
M
ental health condition
Su
bstance abuse condition
mortality
Source: Baggett TP, Hwang SW, O'Connell JJ, Porneala BC, Stringfellow EJ, Orav EJ, Singer DE, Rigotti
NA. Mortality among homeless adults in Boston: Shifts in causes of death over a 15-year
period. 
JAMA Intern Med. 
2013 Feb 11; 173(3): 189-195.
Mortality
All-cause mortality is higher than the general population
Average life expectancy is 27.4 years less than the Average American
Unsheltered homeless have higher mortality rate than all homeless
BHH first cohort (2015) had 38.4% mortality rate
 
Super-
Utilizers
According to the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, a “super-
utilizer” is a person whose
“complex physical, behavioral,
and social needs are not well met
through the current fragmented
health care system.” 
 
Adult Super-Utilizers:
A Preponderance of Behavioral Health Conditions & Homelessness
 
Source: Rinehart DJ, Oronce C, Durfee MJ, et al. Identifying Subgroups of Adult Superutilizers in an Urban Safety-Net System Using Latent
Class Analysis: Implications for Clinical Practice. Med Care. 2018;56(1):e1-e9.
 
 
Cost
Implications
for common
chronic
diseases
 
Power law vs normal distribution
 
Medicaid Super-
Utilizers
 
On average, 5% of all U.S. Medicaid
clients account for 48% of healthcare
delivery costs
In Illinois, 5% of all Medicaid clients
accounted for 62.5% of all Medicaid
healthcare delivery costs
 
 
P
r
e
v
e
n
t
a
b
l
e
C
o
s
t
s
Research indicates that up to 42%
of costs in both high-cost & non-
high-cost cohorts are preventable
Source
: Joynt, K. E., Gawande, A. A., Orav, E. J., & Jha, A. K. (2013). Contribution of preventable acute care spending to total
spending for high-cost Medicare patients. JAMA, 309(24), 2572-2578. doi:10.1001/jama.2013.7103
 
Upstream Structural Determinants
 
 
Decriminalization of  Mental
Illness & Substance use
 
Assisted Outpatient Treatment
(AOT)
 
Assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) is court-supervised
treatment within the community for patients with serious
mental illness.
AOT laws have been shown to reduce hospitalization, arrest
and incarceration, homelessness, victimization, and to
prevent violent acts associated with mental illness, including
suicide and violence against others.
For families that lack resources, AOT can be the single
avenue for guiding their loved ones into treatment
 
Diversion Programs
 
Programs addressing
super-utilizers
 
Increase access to AOT
Increase access & capacity of the 311-shelter system
New Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) outcomes-based
model
Strategic Plan for State Owned Psychiatric Hospitals
State of Illinois Homeless Health Dashboard & Report
1115 Waiver – Medical Respite Care
Certified Community Behavioral Health Center (CCBHC)
City of Chicago Sobering Center
 
 
 
 
 
Questions?
 
 
Stephen Brown MSW LCSW
Director, Preventive Emergency Medicine
University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System
sbbrown9@uic.edu
312-996-4859
 
Chicago: 
Ho
melessness
 
chicago hotspots
 
Source:  Chicago Department of Family and Support Services (DFSS), Annual Point
In Time Count (7/17)
 
Annual Point-in-Time Count (PIT)
 
2022 311 requests for shelter
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Exploring the critical issue of homelessness and its impact on health, this content delves into the challenges faced by individuals experiencing unstable housing situations. It highlights the early mortality rates and poor health outcomes associated with homelessness, particularly focusing on unsheltered individuals. The discussion also touches upon the efforts to decriminalize mental illness and substance use, advocating for diversion into treatment rather than law enforcement involvement. Various perspectives and initiatives in addressing homelessness from a public health standpoint are presented, emphasizing the need for systemic improvements and support services.


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  1. The Intersection of Homelessness & Health: A Public Health Issue Stephen Brown MSW LCSW Director, Preventive Emergency Medicine Director, Better Health Through Housing Department of Emergency Medicine Senior Director, Social & Behavioral Health Systems Transformation Institute of Healthcare Delivery Design University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System sbbrown9@uic.edu

  2. Learning objectives Describe early mortality and poor health outcomes associated with unstable housing and homelessness, with a focus on unsheltered homelessness. It will also describe the broad trends occurring across the country to decriminalize mental illness and substance use, with examples of opportunities for diversion into treatment instead of engagement with law enforcement and incarceration. Provide examples of where the legal profession can advocate for change. Disclosures: I have no relevant financial or non- financial conflicts to report

  3. Homelessness is what happens when every other system fails. - Alex Fox, Mayday Trust, Leeds, United Kingdom You could make many homelessness responses twice as effective if you managed the system better, but the inclination is always there to fund direct services. It s inefficient. If you want to shift the dial, fund the improvements to the systems . - Norman Suchar - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

  4. Emergency Medicine: The Safety Net Provider of Last Resort Upstream systems failures land at our doorstep

  5. Homelessness

  6. Housing Programs UI Health: Better Health Through Housing Chicago & Cook County: Flexible Housing Pool Since 2015: Longest running hospital-to-supportive housing program UI Health has housed more than any other single hospital (130) Over $1.75M invested Healthcare, insurance, philanthropy and city-county government financed consortium Over $20M invested Over 1,000 placed into permanent supportive housing

  7. The changing face of homelessness If a person were asked to describe the homeless, they might talk about a middle-aged man on a street corner with a bottle of whisky in a brown paper sack. Although this stereotype is true for some, the population has shifted.

  8. The changing face of homelessness The face of homelessness is changing. We are seeing more people who have been pushed out of their homes because of low wage jobs, rapidly rising rents and unemployment. One out of three Americans are living paycheck to paycheck, and if they lost their job, couldn t pay their rent or mortgage. 62% of Americans have no emergency savings for things like an emergency room visit or a $500 car repair.

  9. Whats Driving the increase in homelessness Financial insecurity More people than ever are being housed but an even higher number are falling into homelessness Rents are out of reach for many, and millions of affordable places have disappeared Zoning laws and local opposition make it hard to build housing for low- income renters Pandemic aid programs that helped keep many people housed are winding down https://www.npr.org/2023/07/12/1186856463/homelessness-rent-affordable-housing-encampments

  10. The 3 types of homelessness A time-oriented classification of the homeless, based upon the length of time they have been homeless. Both individuals (48%) and families (52%) who become homeless due to a housing, health care, or other financial crisis. They come into the shelter system and stay about three months and often move into housing. 50% are homeless less than 7 days. More individuals than families who regularly go in and out of shelters. They tend to be younger and leave shelters when they get income or use shelters seasonally. 31% of foster care children who age-out of the system will be homeless in their twenties Primarily individuals who have been homeless for a year or more, or four times in the last three years. They tend to be older with significant mental illness, substance abuse and many have a chronic medical condition(s). Chronically homeless can be further divided into sheltered and unsheltered status. 10% 80% 10% Transitional Episodic Chronic

  11. Chronic Conditions % # Morbidity Asthma & COPD Hypertension Kidney Disease Diabetes Cancer Heart Failure Cancer-Metastatic Sickle Cell 70.0% 65.0% 40.0% 25.0% 20.0% 13.3% 10.0% 8.3% 42 39 24 15 12 8 6 5 Co-Morbidities# Complications From Homelessness, IV Drug Use Skin & Subcutaneous DVT & PE Osteomyelitis Endocarditis Traumatic Injury Frostbite Infectious Diseases Hepatitis HIV Tuberculosis Psychiatric & Neurocognitive Disorders Psychiatric Disorder Severe Mental Illness Neurocognitive Disorders Stroke Coma TBI Substance Use Disorders Tobacco Alcohol Opioids Cocaine Cannabis PCP 43.3% 10.0% 8.3% 1.7% ?? 5.0% 26 6 5 1 ?? 3 Zero 7% One 7% Five or More 32% Two 22% Four 10% Three 22% 25.0% 11.7% 3.3% 15 7 2 68.3% 60.0% 13.3% 8.3% 6.7% 6.7% 41 36 8 5 4 4 Zero One Two Three Four Five or More Trimorbidity The combination of: 71.7% 43.3% 43.3% 40.0% 38.3% 10.0% 43 26 26 24 23 6 56% Complex Chronic Condition(s) Substance Use Disorder Severe Mental Illness

  12. A hidden epidemic: 72% of the chronically homeless have neurocognitive deficits Etiologies include severe mental illness, PTSD, uncontrolled seizure disorder, intellectual disability, traumatic brain injury (TBI), dementia, hepatic encephalopathy & childhood lead poisoning. Nearly 50% have evidence of traumatic brain injury Source: Stergiopoulos V, Cusi A, Bekele T, Skosireva A, Latimer E, Schutz C, Fernando I, Rourke SB. Neurocognitive impairment in a large sample of homeless adults with mental illness. Acta Psychiatr Scand. 2015 Apr; 131(4): 256-268.

  13. Unsheltered homelessness were 25 times as likely to report having all three of the following conditions concurrently when compared to their sheltered peers: Physical health condition Mental health condition Substance abuse condition

  14. Mortality All-cause mortality is higher than the general population Average life expectancy is 27.4 years less than the Average American Unsheltered homeless have higher mortality rate than all homeless BHH first cohort (2015) had 38.4% mortality rate Unsheltered Mortality Rate 3.6x higher than all homeless All-Cause Homeless Mortality Risk 12 10 8.9 9.8 10 8 8 6 6 4.5 4 4 2.7 2 2 0 0 0 Unsheltered Sheltered 25-44 45-64 65+ Source: Baggett TP, Hwang SW, O'Connell JJ, Porneala BC, Stringfellow EJ, Orav EJ, Singer DE, Rigotti NA. Mortality among homeless adults in Boston: Shifts in causes of death over a 15-year period. JAMA Intern Med. 2013 Feb 11; 173(3): 189-195.

  15. Super- Utilizers According to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a super- utilizer is a person whose complex physical, behavioral, and social needs are not well met through the current fragmented health care system.

  16. Adult Super-Utilizers: A Preponderance of Behavioral Health Conditions & Homelessness Class Percent Description Behavioral Health Co-Morbidities 1 16% Alcohol use disorder and homelessness AUD & Homelessness 2 14% Medical conditions, mental illness, substance use disorders and homelessness 16% Mental Illness, Substance Use, homelessness & medical conditions 32% 14% Primarily Medical Conditions 3 25% Primarily medical conditions 13% 4 13% More serious mental illness, drug use disorders and homelessness 25% Serious Mental Illness, Drug Use Disorders and homelessness Medical Conditions with some mental illness and substance use disorders 5 32% Medical conditions with some mental illness and substance use disorders Source: Rinehart DJ, Oronce C, Durfee MJ, et al. Identifying Subgroups of Adult Superutilizers in an Urban Safety-Net System Using Latent Class Analysis: Implications for Clinical Practice. Med Care. 2018;56(1):e1-e9.

  17. Cost Implications for common chronic diseases

  18. Power law vs normal distribution

  19. Medicaid Super- Utilizers On average, 5% of all U.S. Medicaid clients account for 48% of healthcare delivery costs In Illinois, 5% of all Medicaid clients accounted for 62.5% of all Medicaid healthcare delivery costs

  20. Preventable Costs Research indicates that up to 42% of costs in both high-cost & non- high-cost cohorts are preventable Source: Joynt, K. E., Gawande, A. A., Orav, E. J., & Jha, A. K. (2013). Contribution of preventable acute care spending to total spending for high-cost Medicare patients. JAMA, 309(24), 2572-2578. doi:10.1001/jama.2013.7103

  21. Upstream Structural Determinants

  22. Decriminalization of Mental Illness & Substance use 988 replaced the National Suicide Prevention Line Immediate access to a mental health professional 85% of calls answered in-state Second phase will be to create behavioral health resources to divert people to. Sequential Intercept Model in Criminal Justice

  23. Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) Assisted outpatient treatment (AOT) is court-supervised treatment within the community for patients with serious mental illness. AOT laws have been shown to reduce hospitalization, arrest and incarceration, homelessness, victimization, and to prevent violent acts associated with mental illness, including suicide and violence against others. For families that lack resources, AOT can be the single avenue for guiding their loved ones into treatment

  24. Diversion Programs Police Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) 40-hour training in de-escalation, recognition of mental illness & substance use Guardians & Warriors Co-Responder Model CAHOOTS (Eugene OR) STAR (Denver) CARES Team (Chicago)

  25. Programs addressing super-utilizers Increase access to AOT Increase access & capacity of the 311-shelter system New Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) outcomes-based model Strategic Plan for State Owned Psychiatric Hospitals State of Illinois Homeless Health Dashboard & Report 1115 Waiver Medical Respite Care Certified Community Behavioral Health Center (CCBHC) City of Chicago Sobering Center

  26. Questions? Stephen Brown MSW LCSW Stephen Brown MSW LCSW Director, Preventive Emergency Medicine University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System sbbrown9@uic.edu 312-996-4859

  27. Chicago: Homelessness Annual Point-in-Time Count (PIT) 2022 311 requests for shelter Source: Chicago Department of Family and Support Services (DFSS), Annual Point In Time Count (7/17)

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