Homelessness a factor in hundreds of emergency admissions
25 November, 2021 12:00 am
3 Min Read
Charities call on the government to tackle the housing crisis By Katie Williams, Data Reporter
Source: PA
New show that over five years homelessness was a factor in hundreds of emergency hospital admissions at the Royal Free London, which includes Barnet Hospital.
Charities have urged the government to do more to improve health services for vulnerable people nationally and focus on providing stable homes for those sleeping rough. NHS Digital data obtained by RADAR reveals roughly 635 emergency visits to Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust (the Trust includes Barnet Hospital) had a diagnosis of homelessness in the five years to March.
The trust figures, which are rounded to the nearest five, cover patients where the primary or secondary cause of admission was homelessness. Across England, emergency admissions linked to homelessness rose significantly in the four years before the coronavirus pandemic, from 11,300 in 2016-17 to 16,700 in 2019-20. However, this number fell back to 12,000 in 2020-21 amid efforts to get people off the streets and into emergency accommodation through the Everyone In initiative.
Matt Downie, director of policy and external affairs at homelessness charity Crisis, said the drop in admissions last year “is one of the success stories of the pandemic”.
He added: “We have an opportunity now to continue and build on this progress.
“A room in a B&B or hotel is not a home, and we need continued cross-government action to tackle the housing crisis if we want to ensure these figures do not revert back to the escalating numbers we were seeing prior to the pandemic.”
Abuse of alcohol and drugs, as well as mental health problems, are among the most common reasons for hospital admissions among homeless people nationally, the figures show.
Homeless Link said many vulnerable people have had such negative experiences when accessing health care that they put off seeking help until they’ve reached crisis point.
Rick Henderson, the charity’s CEO, called on the government to scale up Housing First services – where rough sleepers are given their own home and intensive support – and invest in a pilot programme developing specialist mental health services for those experiencing homelessness.
“We also need to create more hospital teams which bring together different disciplines to provide holistic, long-term support to those who do need emergency care, with the aim of reducing the likelihood of them returning to A&E unnecessarily,” he said.
A DLUHC spokeswoman said more than two-thirds of the 37,000 vulnerable people supported through the Everyone In initiative have moved into longer-term accommodation.
She said: “Rough sleepers are some of the most vulnerable people in our society and the government is committed to ending rough sleeping once and for all.
“We recently announced £66 million to provide somewhere safe and warm for rough sleepers to stay this winter and help those in trapped in drug and alcohol addiction.
“This is on top of the £30 million we are investing in specialist mental health services for people sleeping rough.”
No news is bad news
Independent news outlets like ours – reporting for the community without rich backers – are under threat of closure, turning British towns into news deserts.
The audiences they serve know less, understand less, and can do less.
If our coverage has helped you understand our community a little bit better, please consider supporting us with a monthly, yearly or one-off donation.
Choose the news. Don’t lose the news.
Monthly direct debit
Annual direct debit
£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month. £50 annual supporters get a digital copy of each month's paper before anyone else. £84 annual supporters get a print copy by post and a digital copy of each month's before anyone else.