Skip Navigation
Library Education Experiences Gallery Resources Events Networks
Homelessness and Mental Illness: A Story of Failure
Don't have access to the article? Read about our open access policy here.
Homelessness reflects our societal values. People with psychiatric disabilities are generally poor and disadvantaged, and safe, decent housing is often beyond their means. Access to affordable housing and appropriate supports for people with disabilities might easily undergird the social structure of the wealthiest nation on earth; indeed, deinstitutionalization could make sense only in the context of providing affordable housing and supports. Focusing on identifying characteristics of homeless people or elements of treatment needs thus may obscure more fundamental problems— those flowing from a public policy that was partly a money-saving maneuver trading on a humanistic ethos that condemned institutions as oppressive by definition and ignored the protective function they served. Given the realities of deinstitutionalization, available housing, urban life, and public health care, individuals with severe psychiatric disabilities are at continuous risk for homelessness, as well as other preventable conditions such as incarceration, victimization, and HIV infection. (Authors)
Journal
1999
Psychiatric Services
50
5
589
Print
About Us  -  Contact Us
Home  -  Library  -  Education  -  Experiences  -  Gallery  -  Doing Research  -  Events  -  Networks
Download PDF Reader
A Canadian Homelessness Research Network (CHRN) initiative. The CHRN has received financial support from the Government of Canada’s Homelessness Partnering Strategy and the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada