| Literature DB >> 35897280 |
Wayne A Warburton1, Marina Papic2, Elizabeth Whittaker3.
Abstract
Many women become homeless each year, both women who are alone and women with children. Both groups face substantial risks to their physical and mental health, as do the children of homeless mothers. Little is known about the similarities and differences between these two groups in terms of their demographic characteristics, their circumstances on presentation to specialist homelessness services, and the factors that have contributed to their homelessness. The current study analysed data from 163 single mothers with children and 126 lone women who presented to a specialist homelessness service in Australia. It found some similarities between groups, but also considerable heterogeneity. Single mothers were more likely to be younger, to have been born overseas, and to have been homeless in the past 12 months. Lone women were more likely to have medical issues, a mental health condition, addiction issues, admission to a psychiatric ward in the past 12 months, and to not be in the labour force. Implications for service delivery are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: homeless lone women; homeless mothers with children; homelessness service delivery; specialist homelessness services
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897280 PMCID: PMC9331468 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19158909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Sociodemographic characteristics according to client group (N = 289).
| Characteristics | Group | Group Differences | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lone Women | Single Mothers with Child/ren (N = 163) | ||||
| Age (years): M (SD, range) | N = 126 | 47.22 (14.9, 22–90) | N = 163 | 38.33 (9.42, 19–66) | |
| Australian-born: N (%) | N = 126 | 96 (76.19) | N = 161 | 102 (63.35) | χ2 = 5.44 * |
| Speak English at home: N (%) | N = 102 | 96 (94.12) | N = 118 | 87 (73.73) | χ2 = 16.26 *** |
| Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander descent: N (%) | N = 120 | 12 (10.00) | N = 158 | 11 (6.96) | χ2 = 0.83 |
| Prior mental health diagnosis: N (%) | N = 87 | 69 (79.31) | N = 93 | 54 (58.06) | χ2 = 9.38 ** |
| Prior history of homeless a: N (%) | N = 121 | 28 (23.14) | N = 157 | 58 (36.94) | χ2 = 6.09 * |
| Hospital (excluding psychiatric reasons) a: N (%) | N = 92 | 19 (20.65) | N = 91 | 14 (15.38) | χ2 = 0.86 |
| Psychiatric hospital/unit a: N (%) | N = 92 | 14 (15.22) | N = 91 | 0 (0) | χ2 = 15.00 *** |
a In the 12 months prior to presentation: * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
Circumstances when presenting to support agency according to client group (N = 288).
| Circumstances upon Presentation | Group | |
|---|---|---|
| Lone Women | Single Mothers with Child/ren (N = 163) | |
| Dwelling type: N (%) | N = 126 | N = 162 |
| Housed | 117 (92.86) | 125 (77.16) ** |
| Homeless (primary) | 2 (1.59) | 0 (0) |
| Homeless (secondary) | 7 (5.56) | 37 (22.84) ** |
| Labour force status: N (%) | N = 118 | N = 150 |
| Employed | 3 (2.54) | 8 (5.33) |
| Unemployed | 36 (30.51) | 71 (47.33) * |
| Not in the labour force | 79 (66.95) | 71 (47.33) ** |
| Main source of income: N (%) | N = 122 | N = 157 |
| Wage/salary | 2 (1.64) | 5 (3.18) |
| Government benefit/allowance | 116 (95.08) | 73 (46.50) ** |
| Parenting payment | 2 (1.64) | 76 (48.41) ** |
| Other source of income | 1 (0.82) | 1 (0.64) |
* p < 0.01; ** p < 0.001.
Between-group comparisons of main reasons and other contributing factors that led to presentation at support agency according to client group (N = 287).
| Presenting Reasons | Group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lone Women | Single Mothers with Child/ren | |||
| Main Reason | Contributing Factor | Main Reason | Contributing Factor | |
| Housing crisis ^ | 38 (30.40) | 53 (42.40) | 39 (24.07) | 67 (41.36) |
| Financial difficulties | 22 (17.60) | 55 (44.00) | 38 (23.46) | 86 (53.09) |
| Inadequate/inappropriate dwelling conditions | 18 (14.40) | 39 (31.20) | 25 (15.43) | 46 (28.40) |
| Housing affordability stress | 8 (6.40) | 31 (24.80) | 12 (7.41) | 33 (20.37) |
| Domestic/family violence | 4 (3.20) | 20 (16.00) | 15 (9.26) | 36 (22.22) |
| Lack of family/community support | 8 (6.40) | 33 (26.40) | 10 (6.17) | 43 (26.54) |
| Mental health issues | 10 (8.00) | 53 (42.40) | 3 (1.85) * | 33 (20.37) *** |
| Problematic addictive behaviours a | 8 (6.40) | 41 (32.80) | 0 (0.00) ** | 6 (3.70) *** |
| Previous accommodation ended | 0 (0.00) | 4 (3.20) | 5 (3.09) | 19 (11.73) ** |
| Relationship/family breakdown/time-out b | 2 (1.60) | 28 (22.40) | 3 (1.85) | 40 (24.69) |
| Medical health issues | 3 (2.40) | 26 (20.80) | 0 (0.00) | 13 (8.02) ** |
| Nonfamily violence | 0 (0.00) | 6 (4.80) | 1 (0.62) | 6 (3.70) |
| Unemployment or employment difficulties c | 1 (0.80) | 20 (16.00) | 0 (0.00) | 12 (7.41) |
| Sexual abuse | 0 (0.00) | 5 (4.00) | 0 (0.00) | 4 (2.47) |
| Itinerant | 0 (0.00) | 5 (4.00) | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.62) |
| Transition from custodial arrangements/foster care/other care arrangements d | 0 (0.00) | 3 (2.40) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| Discrimination | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.80) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| Unable to return home due to environmental reasons | 1 (0.80) | 1 (0.80) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
a Due to small numbers, ‘problematic drug use’, ‘problematic alcohol use’, and ‘problematic gambling’ were collapsed. b Due to small numbers, ‘time-out from family/other situation’ and ‘relationship/family breakdown’ were collapsed. c Due to small numbers, ‘unemployment’ and ‘employment difficulties’ were collapsed. d Due to small numbers, ‘transition from custodial arrangements’, ‘transition from foster care and child safety residential placements’, and ‘transition from other care arrangements’ were collapsed. ^ All statistics are in the format N (%) * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001. Note: ‘Disengagement with school or other education and training’ was removed as no participants reported this as a main or contributing factor.