WHEELING The city of Wheeling’s new ordinance prohibiting camping on public property goes into effect at the beginning of the New Year on Monday, despite
WHEELING – The city of Wheeling’s new ordinance prohibiting camping on public property goes into effect at the beginning of the New Year on Monday, despite the fact that no managed homeless encampment has been established yet. In early November, a majority of members of Wheeling City Council passed the new ordinance by a split […]
Study shows link between financial strain, homelessness and severe mental illness
Financial strains like debt or unemployment are significant risk factors for becoming homeless, and even help to explain increased risk of homelessness associated with severe mental illness, reports a study in a supplement to the April issue of
Medical Care. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.
The findings suggest that adding financial well-being as a focus of homelessness prevention efforts seems promising, both at the individual and community level, according to the new research, led by Eric Elbogen, PhD, of the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) National Center on Homelessness and Duke University School of Medicine. The study appears as part of a special issue on Multimorbidity and social drivers of homelessness and health, produced in partnership between the VA National Center on Homelessness and the American Public Health Association Caucus on Homeles
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IMAGE: To what extent does financial strain mediate the relationship between severe mental illness and homelessness? view more
Credit: Elbogen et al. (2021) | Medical Care | DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001453
March 12, 2021 - Financial strains like debt or unemployment are significant risk factors for becoming homeless, and even help to explain increased risk of homelessness associated with severe mental illness, reports a study in a supplement to the April issue of
Medical Care. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.
The findings suggest that adding financial well-being as a focus of homelessness prevention efforts seems promising, both at the individual and community level, according to the new research, led by Eric Elbogen, PhD, of the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) National Center on Homelessness and Duke University School of Medicine. The study appears as part of a special issue on Multimorbidity and social drive