Lack of Housing and Mental Health Disabilities Exacerbate One Another
Heidi Schultheis Center for American Progress November 20, 2018
People with mental health disabilities often fall victim to harmful , including having their diagnoses and symptoms used to and insult others. Similarly, homelessness is widely , and people who experience homelessness are frequently , , and . Given the misperceptions about both of these groups鈥攁nd especially about people at the intersection of the two鈥攊t is critical to understand the connection between mental health disabilities and homelessness and the role that policy plays in that connection.*
People with mental health disabilities are vastly overrepresented in the population of people who experience homelessness. Of the more than 550,000 people in America who experienced homelessness on a given night in 2017, had a mental illness. The proportion of people experiencing with mental health disabilities was even higher鈥攏early . Despite this fact, the reality is that most people with mental illness fortunately do not experience homelessness: While about 20 percent of all adults in the United States have a mental illness, less than of people in the country experienced homelessness on a given night in 2017.
How mental health and homelessness connect
While all individuals and diagnoses are unique, mental health disabilities often cause a that substantially interfere with a person鈥檚 , including or paying rent and utilities on a regular basis. Symptoms such as , along with the surrounding mental illness, can also make it difficult for someone with a mental health disability to .
Furthermore, the extreme stress, anxiety, isolation, and sleep loss that come with homelessness mental and physical health problems, demonstrating the vicious cycle between homelessness and mental illness. But it does not have to be this way.
How the country got here
The past several decades reveal the role that policy has played in connecting mental health disabilities and homelessness. In 1963, then-President John F. Kennedy signed the , which was intended to fund the construction of 1,500 community-based treatment facilities nationwide in order to provide services and treatment to people with mental illness in their own communities, rather than in state mental hospitals. As a result, many state mental in the decades that followed, and patients moved out of neglectful, and into communities. Yet because of changes to the funding formula for community mental health centers, as well as policymakers鈥 about the ability of patients鈥 families and networks to support people leaving institutionalized settings, those with mental illness have struggled to get their service and support needs fully met in the community. Today, the legacy of this troubled policy鈥攌nown as 鈥攎eans that people with mental health disabilities and people experiencing homelessness are and , with jails effectively serving as the country鈥檚 .
Coupled with deinstitutionalization, the nation鈥檚 growing affordable housing crisis has exacerbated conditions for people with mental health disabilities who experience homelessness. The leading cause of homelessness is a . Therefore, the key to ending homelessness for virtually all populations鈥攚ith and without disabilities鈥攊s affordable, accessible, permanent housing. Yet with , stagnant wages, and public housing stock and project-based subsidies, affordable housing is to find. And for people with disabilities, the situation is even more dire because affordable and accessible units are in .
Nearly , including almost 4 million children, rely on federal rental assistance programs for housing. Despite a for housing assistance, only eligible low-income renters receives the help they need. This affordability crisis affects a growing number of people but is especially challenging for those with mental health disabilities who are experiencing homelessness. In addition to affordability problems, when searching for housing, people in this group face , including from landlords who discourage them from applying.
Reality is at odds with common stereotypes of who experiences homelessness
Lengthy and frequent periods of time spent either in shelters or unsheltered were once incorrectly experience of homelessness. Today, however, these characteristics are understood as indicators of chronic homelessness, which affects only 10 to 15 percent of all people who experience homelessness. Because people who experience chronic homelessness are often the and most vulnerable, they are frequently mistaken as representative of the entire homeless population.
Moreover, media coverage too often reinforces about the . Stories frequently homelessness, mental illness, and substance use disorders, which contributes to the false narrative that homelessness is an intractable problem. This also reinforces the inaccurate belief that homelessness is a consequence of a failure of so-called , which, in turn, for government solutions. The notion that homelessness is caused by individual shortcomings also prompts government to create unproductive and often costly Band-Aid interventions. For example, some cities have passed laws in public places and have used to prevent people from lying down. Many cities also offer in the hope that people experiencing homelessness will leave, while others spend time and money without offering assistance, services, or alternative places for people to stay.
Effective mental health and housing solutions
People who experience homelessness need to have the option of entering accessible, where they can safely stay while formulating a housing plan. Yet in shelters, abound for people with disabilities鈥攁s well as for other marginalized groups, such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender () people鈥攄espite the fact that these facilities serve an increasingly population and that the people living in shelters are almost to have a disability compared with the general population. Coupled with , including overcrowding, cleanliness problems, and burdensome rules, some people choose not to stay in shelters.
Regardless of whether someone enters a shelter, is a highly effective housing solution for people with chronic patterns of homelessness, as it pairs a renewable subsidy with intensive services such as health care coordination, employment assistance, substance use disorder counseling, and more. People with shorter homelessness histories and fewer or better-managed disabilities may be successful with a lesser intervention, such as help paying a security deposit and first month鈥檚 rent or , which offers a short-term subsidy and housing-focused case management. Like federal rental assistance programs, however, homeless assistance grant-supported programs are currently funded at .
In addition to providing accessible, affordable, permanent housing, increasing access to health care is crucial to improving the health and housing outcomes of people at the intersection of mental health disabilities and homelessness鈥攊ndividuals who are to have life-threatening medical conditions and encounter barriers to accessing treatment and preventive care. Specifically, protecting the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and without enrollment-reducing mechanisms such as so-called work requirements鈥攚hich often function as 鈥攊s critical to improving coverage and care for people with the greatest needs. And for people with acute illnesses and health needs who experience homelessness, it is essential for communities to offer regardless of the patient鈥檚 ability to pay.
Conclusion
President Donald Trump, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson, and congressional Republicans are determined to , , and . Doing so poses major threats to the health and well-being of people with mental health disabilities, people who experience homelessness, and, especially, people at the intersection of these two groups. If the current trends of diminished federal support for affordable housing and attacks on the ACA continue, the barriers these groups face in obtaining housing and health care are sure to increase. It is important to recognize that public policies have played a critical role in creating and worsening conditions for people in both these groups. As such, policy will also be key to developing thoughtful, lasting solutions.
Heidi Schultheis is a policy analyst for the Poverty to Prosperity Program at the Center for American Progress.
*Author鈥檚 note: In this column, the terms 鈥渕ental health disability鈥 and 鈥渕ental illness鈥 are used interchangeably.