A Qualitative Study Exploring Access to Mental Health and Substance Use Support among Individuals Experiencing Homelessness during COVID-19
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Recruitment, Procedures, and Data Collection
2.2. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Inadvertent Exclusion
3.1.1. Mental Health Is Not 9-to-5
“Aye, it should be open when you are feeling the worst. Sometimes when you are feeling your worst it is very late. Ya know, it’s dark, and it’s that’s when you feel your most loneliness. Like after 10 o’clock at night ya know, when there is no one around. People are in bed”.—Keith, 45
“I want support 24/7”.—Lily, 33
“There’s an organisation [name removed] who I’ve sought help from in the past, but at this moment in time, they’re only open Monday to Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. If you’re having any episodes or if you need support outside of those hours, you can’t turn to them, where you used to be able to. They used to be open all sorts of hours and they even offered an emergency line for the weekends, but that’s all cut off now”.—Mike, 33
3.1.2. Digital Exclusion
“He rang and went, “Right, if you join this Zoom link.” Obviously, I’m sat there as if to say, “Well what am I supposed to do? I haven’t got credit, I can’t ring up to say I can’t join the Zoom link.” Obviously, after I’d missed the Zoom link meeting, he rang me on the phone and went, “Why haven’t you joined?” I went, “Because I don’t have internet, I don’t have a laptop, I don’t have credit on my phone to get internet to do it.” He went, “Oh right, well we’ll do it over the phone now then.” It’s like, “Well why didn’t you ask about it?””.—Danny, 29
“They expect you all to have these phones that do everything and we haven’t”.—Sam, 37
“I dread to think how many phones I’ve had and they’ve been stolen or whatever. You couldn’t leave your phone lying anywhere. Everything goes. If you had a spit, it would be gone before it hit the floor”.—Hannah, 43
“Computer illiterate. I’ve been on courses and that for it, but I get no further forward two weeks later from the first minute. I can’t log any technology in my head”.—Alan, 54
3.1.3. Awareness of What Support Is out There
“Once you’re in that vicious circle, it can be very hard to access anything, you don’t know who to go to or who to speak to or who to contact, it’s just extremely difficult to know what to do”.—Ian, 53
“Well, I think somebody coming out and actually talking to the girls, somebody being informed that there are services out there. The key is getting out into the hostels and knocking on the doors and saying, “This is what we’re offering, and would you like to be involved in it?” You’re not aware".—Hannah, 43
“I just googled. Yeah it was um, I was googling how to kill myself and it came up with that. And I ended up using it. I’ve been using it for months”.—Andrea, 25
3.2. Barriers to Recovery
3.2.1. Lack of Space for Recovery
“They knew there was Spice use in this hostel. They shouldn’t have put me there. I was clean for seven months”.—Sam, 37
“[treatment location] It’s not a nice place to go to when you’re trying to recover from drugs. They’re trying to sell you things outside, and inside the building to be honest. There’s always somebody trying to push something onto you. When you’re trying to recover yourself, it’s hard when people are putting things in your face”.—Hannah, 43
“I don’t like going, but you got-you have to. Because, I’ve got away from it all, and yet you’re walking in and seeing people who are still using and they try and get you to buy some and things like that. [contrast to pandemic] While the pandemic is on, it’s all been changed to differently. You can’t go, they keep away and people get in touch with you over the phone. That would make it alright if it was always like that. That way you don’t have to bump into them”.—Alan, 54
“When I got put into shared accommodation it was quite hard because every one of the neighbours was on hard drugs like heroin and crack and stuff like that. Obviously, I’m no longer using. It’s like they try to pull you in, so I had to pretty much isolate myself when I was in there”.—Danny, 29
3.2.2. Disjointed Care and Repetition of Recovery Stories
“I know. I am sick of getting new workers and having to explain again. Explaining me story to workers. You should get one worker. I’m sick. … I have done this for 17 years and I can’t do it anymore. I can’t”.—Clare, 32
You know you get tired of times of saying—you just want to live a normal life again, you know. You explain your situation to one person, then you’ve, I’ve got to do it over and over and over again. It just seems like it’s never ending".—Keith, 45
“Before lockdown, it was a bit of a jigsaw puzzle, everything was here, there and everywhere. Nobody was really communicating well enough together. But since lockdown, people have really honed in on their skills and they’ve had to learn to cope with different ways of doing things. I’ve got literally an appointment almost every day now, and I’ve got such a good routine going on, it’s amazing".—Emily, 39
3.2.3. Not Ready for Recovery
“I don’t know if the support is there but I’m not ready to ask for help”.—Clare, 32
“When you’re feeling down like that and you’re wanting to go with stuff…”.—Danny, 29
3.2.4. Prioritization When Resources Are Scarce
“I rung the Crisis team a lot. I was on the phone to them nine times in one night before they actually came out. […later explains] the Crisis team is pretty much the wrong name for them I would say”.—Mike, 33
“If you’re determined to climb to the top of that mountain, you’re going to get there. But it’s really, really difficult. So, you just have to shout and scream and try as hard as you can”.—Emily, 39
“They say “ah we can do this, we can do that” but it never seems to come off, or the supports not really that good or it’s bad for you, it’s not good for you. Most of them just leave you to do what you are doing. … Promises, false promises and it doesn’t happen”.—Tommy, 38
3.3. Building a System Responsive to Needs
3.3.1. Disconnect between Service Provision and Needs
“Because they say, “Oh, you have to reduce your drinking,” but I can’t. I’ve got deep psychological issues, I can’t- So, I need the therapy in line with the reduction of alcohol. I need them in conjunction, that’s my biggest hurdle at the minute. It’s a vicious cycle, isn’t it?”.—Emily, 39
“…it would have helped because we’d all be in the same boat anyway, so we could help each other with our own experiences. [later goes on to say] Yes, it would be somebody on your own level that has actually been through alcoholism or drug use”.—Glen, 62
“Just because I’m feeling good this month, it doesn’t mean that in a month or two’s time, I am still feeling great. There are constant reviews and chats and contacts and stuff, which is great”.—Liam, 26
3.3.2. Choice and an Active Voice
“Everyone’s different. So, a lot of people loved the Zoom, a lot of people like going to different meetings, a lot of people need a lot more support than other people. So, it’s about tailoring it or catering for the individual isn’t it, I suppose”.—Andy, 46
“Like when people are saying, like they don’t want to be here, or anything in the mental health bag—don’t just hoy a prescription in their face. Like sit down with them and look at what they need".—Carlie, 25
“Ask the person, ask the individual how they want to be helped, that’s the way forward for them, what help do they need”.—Darren, 36
4. Discussion
4.1. Strengths and Limitations
4.2. Implications for Practice and Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Inadvertent Exclusion | Barriers to Recovery | Building a System Responsive to Needs |
---|---|---|---|
Subthemes | Mental health is not 9-to-5 Digital exclusion Awareness of what support is out there | Lack of space for recovery Disjointed care and repetition of recovery stories Not ready for recovery Prioritisation when resources are scarce | Disconnect between service provision and needs Choice and an active voice |
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Adams, E.A.; Parker, J.; Jablonski, T.; Kennedy, J.; Tasker, F.; Hunter, D.; Denham, K.; Smiles, C.; Muir, C.; O’Donnell, A.; et al. A Qualitative Study Exploring Access to Mental Health and Substance Use Support among Individuals Experiencing Homelessness during COVID-19. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 3459. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063459
Adams EA, Parker J, Jablonski T, Kennedy J, Tasker F, Hunter D, Denham K, Smiles C, Muir C, O’Donnell A, et al. A Qualitative Study Exploring Access to Mental Health and Substance Use Support among Individuals Experiencing Homelessness during COVID-19. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(6):3459. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063459
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdams, Emma A., Jeff Parker, Tony Jablonski, Joanne Kennedy, Fiona Tasker, Desmond Hunter, Katy Denham, Claire Smiles, Cassey Muir, Amy O’Donnell, and et al. 2022. "A Qualitative Study Exploring Access to Mental Health and Substance Use Support among Individuals Experiencing Homelessness during COVID-19" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 6: 3459. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063459
APA StyleAdams, E. A., Parker, J., Jablonski, T., Kennedy, J., Tasker, F., Hunter, D., Denham, K., Smiles, C., Muir, C., O’Donnell, A., Widnall, E., Dotsikas, K., Kaner, E., & Ramsay, S. E. (2022). A Qualitative Study Exploring Access to Mental Health and Substance Use Support among Individuals Experiencing Homelessness during COVID-19. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(6), 3459. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063459