Publications
Department of Medicine faculty members published more than 3,000 peer-reviewed articles in 2022.
2018
CONTEXT
The homeless population is aging. Older homeless adults experience premature development of age-related conditions and an elevated symptom burden. Little is known about symptom experience among older homeless adults.
OBJECTIVES
To characterize the experience, understanding, and management of physical, psychological, social (e.g. loneliness), and existential (e.g. regret, loss of dignity) symptoms among older homeless adults.
METHODS
We conducted semi-structured interviews from June 2016 through March 2017 with a purposive sample of participants from the HOPE HOME cohort, a longitudinal study of homeless adults ages 50 and older. We analyzed data between June 2016 and December 2017 using thematic analysis.
RESULTS
We found four main themes: 1) Non-physical symptoms are interwoven with and as distressing as physical symptoms; 2) Individuals attribute symptoms to childhood abuse, manual labor, the conditions of homelessness, and aging; 3) Symptoms interfere with daily functioning, causing negative changes in personality, energy, and motivation; and 4) Individuals cope with symptoms through religion, social support, and substance use.
CONCLUSION
Homelessness causes and exacerbates physical and psychological distress. Interventions should address multiple interconnected dimensions of suffering. Health systems that care for homeless patients should adapt palliative care practices using a stepwise approach. Homeless shelters should adopt policies and modifications that increase privacy and autonomy while promoting community-building. Housing interventions should promote community-building. All who work with people experiencing homelessness should avoid stigmatizing language and recognize homeless individuals' sources of strength and coping.
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