| Literature DB >> 32965555 |
Sean A Kidd1,2, Susan Greco3, Kwame McKenzie4.
Abstract
Homelessness is a persistent global challenge with significant health impacts on those affected. Homeless people are by definition the most exposed to weather conditions and the social and economic problems caused by extreme weather and climate change and variability. This systematic review was designed to synthesize the academic literature that addresses the health and social implications of global climate change for homelessness. The question examined in this systematic scoping review is the following: What is the current state of knowledge in the scientific literature on the health and social implications of global climate change for homelessness? A systematic scoping review method was used to identify and synthesize the peer-reviewed literature relevant to this question. The databases searched were PsycINFO, Medline, Scopus, and Google Scholar. Of the 26 papers identified in this review, 20 employed original data analyses with conclusions largely inferred from cross-sectional associations. Themes included the potential influence of climate change on homelessness prevalence, climate impacts that exacerbate specific vulnerabilities of homeless populations (e.g., chronic illness, exposure, stigmatization), and health and social outcomes. Service use and design implications were also addressed. Given the scale of the impacts of climate change on homelessness, the literature on this topic poses promising directions but is under-developed in its current state to adequately inform risk mitigation and response planning. A systems framework is proposed here to inform future research and service design.Entities:
Keywords: Climate; Homelessness; Review; Systems
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32965555 PMCID: PMC8190258 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-020-00483-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Fig. 1Article selection flow diagram
Article summary
| Paper | Country |
|---|---|
| Hale [ | USA |
| Zhang et al. [ | Canada |
| *Gibson [ | USA |
| Every et al. [ | Australia |
| Corinth and Lucas [ | USA |
| Romaszko et al. [ | Poland |
| Settembrino [ | USA |
| Nicolay et al. [ | USA |
| Quilty et al. [ | Australia |
| Lee et al. [ | USA |
| Adetokunbo and Emeka [ | Nigeria |
| *Campbell [ | Australia |
| Walters and Gaillard [ | India |
| Siordia et al. [ | USA |
| Pepper and Jocoy [ | USA |
| Cusack et al. [ | Australia |
| Harlan et al. [ | USA |
| *Parlee and Furgal [ | Canada |
| *Shonkoff et al. [ | USA |
| Klein and Riemer [ | Canada |
| Brown et al. [ | UK |
| Kloos et al. [ | USA |
| *Ramin and Svoboda [ | USA |
| Koutsavlis and Kosatsky [ | Canada |
| Wiesenfeld and Panza [ | Venezuela |
| North et al. [ | USA |
*Primarily review and/or commentary
Number of articles identified in database search: PsycINFO, n = 873; Medline, n = 898; Scopus, n = 517; Google, n ≈ 7880 results (4 unique papers/14 duplicates)
Fig. 2Histogram of climate change and homelessness publications (1998–2019)
Fig. 3Hypothetical model for considering climate-homelessness relationships