Homelessness And Mental Health Essay

1580 Words7 Pages

No specific gender, race, socioeconomic status, or occupation is exempt from the stigma associated with mental health issues. It has an impact on every person, both directly and indirectly. Women who have been victimized often suffer from mental illnesses that lead to additional victimization, such as homelessness. The main goal of this thesis is to inform and raise awareness of homelessness and mental illness. I hope that by sharing the information and data I will be collecting through my work, people will be inspired to help those in need in our neighborhoods and, in the long run, will contribute to the eradication of the stigmas and misinformation associated with these two subjects. Using a communications platform called Zoom, we were able …show more content…

Using interviews and data from the 2022 ATP research project, conducted at Ozanam Manor a mixed-shelter etc., resulting in Perception of Social and Physical Environmental Risk Factors Affecting Women Experiencing Homelessness: A Mixed Method Study, I will try to dispel or alleviation connections between mental health and the homeless, particularly homeless women.

Both homelessness and mental health issues are stigmatized by a variety of misconceptions and presumptions that not only reflect poorly on those affected but have caused homelessness and mental health to be held as mutually exclusive. Homelessness and mental health are not mutually exclusive; research indicates that many homeless individuals also have one or more mental health disorders, and vice versa, according to E. Struening and D. Padgett's work, "Physical Health Status, Substance Use and Abuse, and Mental Disorders Among Homeless Adults" …show more content…

It is my hope that this work will contribute to a greater understanding of both issues and lessen the marginalization of groups who are affected by one or both. Change, awareness, and healing can occur when we work together.
This study, along with the other literature reviews outlined, focuses on the ways in which women's psychiatric disorders can make them vulnerable to homelessness or unstable housing. Interpersonal and ecological factors that can lead to victimization, self-victimization, or revictimization of women often include substance abuse, physical health problems, mental health disorders, and violence against women (Alatorre, 2019, Milaney et al, 2020). These incidents may increase dread and unwillingness to live with men in a gender-mixed shelter such as Ozanam