| Literature DB >> 35328907 |
Julia Corey1, James Lyons1, Austin O'Carroll2, Richie Stafford3, Jo-Hanna Ivers1.
Abstract
Persons experiencing homelessness (PEH) are at heightened risk for infection, morbidity, and mortality from COVID-19. However, health consequences of the pandemic extend far beyond those directly caused by the virus. This scoping review aimed to explore the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health and well-being of PEH in North America and Europe. A systematic search of academic and grey literature was conducted in September 2021. To be included, studies had to include primary data related to the impact of the pandemic on health or well-being of PEH and be written in English. All potentially relevant references were independently screened by two reviewers, and minor conflicts were settled with input of a third reviewer. A total of 96 articles met criteria for inclusion. Data extraction was completed for all included studies, and findings synthesised and presented thematically. Numerous health impacts of the pandemic on PEH were identified, including SARS-CoV-2 infection, morbidity, mortality, and hospitalisation, fear of infection, access to housing, hygiene, PPE, food, as well as mental health, substance use, other health-related outcomes and treatment services. Gaps in the literature relating to persons using alcohol, access to mental health support, and violence were also identified. Implications for future research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; health; homelessness; pandemic
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328907 PMCID: PMC8954292 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19063219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Study characteristics.
| Country | Study Design | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. | 51 | Cross-sectional | 30 |
| U.K. | 9 | Unspecified * | 7 |
| France | 9 | Longitudinal | 4 |
| Canada | 6 | Mixed methods | 4 |
| Spain | 5 | Pilot | 4 |
| Italy | 4 | Case study | 4 |
| Germany | 4 | Qualitative | 3 |
| Denmark | 2 | Report | 3 |
| Belgium | 2 | Case report | 2 |
| Multiple | 2 | Case series | 2 |
| Slovakia | 1 | Retrospective | 2 |
| Ireland | 1 | Cross-sectional seroprevalence | 2 |
|
| Analytical observational | 1 | |
| PEH | 74 | Community-based participatory research | 1 |
| General patient populations | 6 | Cross-sectional community-based | 1 |
| People living with HIV | 5 | Cross-sectional community-based surveillance | 1 |
| Multiple vulnerable groups | 3 | Cross-sectional multicentre cohort | 1 |
| COVID-19 patients | 3 | Cross-sectional retrospective chart review | 1 |
| Persons using drugs | 2 | Descriptive | 1 |
| U.S. Veterans | 1 | Disease prevention protocol | 1 |
| African Americans in Southern U.S. | 1 | Interrupted time series | 1 |
| Criminal justice-involved women | 1 | Longitudinal ecological | 1 |
|
| Matched-case control observational | 1 | |
| Journal article | 48 | Nationwide cross-sectional seroprevalence | 1 |
| Brief report | 8 | Nonconcurrent cohort | 1 |
| Research letter | 6 | Nonrandomised observational pre/post | 1 |
| Short communication | 4 | Nonrandomised pre/post | 1 |
| Case study | 4 | Observational retrospective | 1 |
| Preprint | 4 | Point prevalence | 1 |
| Report | 4 | Population-based prospective | 1 |
| Letter to the editor | 3 | Population-based retrospective e-cohort | 1 |
| Research note | 2 | Pragmatic randomised controlled trial | 1 |
| Weekly report | 2 | Prospective | 1 |
| Notes from the field | 2 | Qualitative exploratory | 1 |
| Rapid communication | 1 | Quality improvement program | 1 |
| Practice full report | 1 | Rapid case study | 1 |
| Case report | 1 | Repeated cross-sectional | 1 |
| Brief research report | 1 | Retrospective chart audit | 1 |
| Concise communication | 1 | Retrospective cohort | 1 |
| Short report | 1 | Retrospective cross-sectional | 1 |
| Research brief | 1 | Retrospective serological | 1 |
| Review | 1 | ||
| Briefing report | 1 | ||
* Some studies did not specify the study design used. Supplementary Table S1 provides more information as to the methods used for data collection.