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Home >> Research >> Grantee Research >> DDRG Dissertation

Voices From the Street: Exploring How Older Adults and Outreach Workers Define and Mitigate Problems Associated With Urban Elder Homelessness

Author: Kelly Mills-Dick

Dissertation School: Trustees of Boston University

Pages: 371

Publication Date: January 2012

Availability:
Available from the HUD USER Helpdesk P.O. Box 23268 Washington, DC 20026-3268 Toll Free: 1-800-245-2691 Fax: 1-202-708-9981 Email: oup@oup.org

Access Number: 10969

Abstract:

According to recent estimates, there are more than 75,000 homeless elders in the United States today (Cunningham and Henry, 2007). Such numbers represent the failures of the aging and homeless service systems to meet the needs of the most vulnerable older adults in our communities. Further, the housing and aging literatures have paid little attention to elder homelessness (Gonyea et al., 2010). This study addresses a critical gap by bringing forth the voices of those on the frontlines to explore how older adults experiencing homelessness and their outreach workers define and mitigate problems associated with urban elder homelessness.

Grounded in theories regarding the social construction of social problems, and informed by theories of homelessness, this qualitative study utilized a constructionist, phenomenological approach. A series of in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted over the course of 1 year with 20 older adults experiencing homelessness and 6 outreach workers in Boston, Massachusetts. Interviews focused on perceptions of elder homelessness, its causes, and potential solutions. Data were analyzed using an inductive, interpretive, and iterative process.

Elder homelessness was described by both older adults and outreach workers not as a single problem or solely as a lack of physical shelter, but as a process involving the accumulation or saturation of multiple challenges and disadvantages. Participants constructed diverse pathways through homelessness weaving combinations of structural-economic, interpersonal, and intrapersonal factors. A dominant theme was how the fraying of social resources, often the loss of family and friends, increased elders’ vulnerabilities. A high degree of congruence was found between the two groups; however, older adults more often highlighted personal factors while outreach workers emphasized the role of systemic factors in pathways through elder homelessness.

Study findings illuminate the contributions of a social construction perspective to understanding and resolving elder homelessness and suggest the utilization of a tripartite model for understanding and intervening along the pathways through elder homelessness. This study underscores the need for a comprehensive, coordinated policy response to address older adults’ housing, economic, health, and social support needs and strengthen the safety net toward the prevention and resolution of elder homelessness.

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