Abstract

High rates of COVID-19 infections and deaths amongst people who are homeless in London, UK were feared. Rates however stayed much lower than expected throughout 2020; an experience that compares to other settings globally. This study sought a community level perspective to explore this rate of infections, and through this explore relationships between COVID-19 and existing health inequalities. Analyses are reported from ongoing qualitative studies on COVID-19 and homeless health service evaluation in London, UK. Repeated in-depth telephone interviews were implemented with people experiencing homelessness in London (n=17; 32 interviews in total) as well as street outreach workers, nurses and hostel staff (n=10) from September 2020 to early 2021. Thematic analysis generated three themes to explore peoples’ experiences of, and perspectives on, low infections: people experiencing homelessness following, creating and breaking social distancing and hygiene measures; social distancing in the form of social exclusion as a long-running feature of life; and a narrative of ‘street immunity’ resulting from harsh living conditions. Further study is needed to understand how these factors combine to prevent COVID-19 and how they relate to different experiences of homelessness. This community perspective can ensure that emerging narratives of COVID-19 prevention success don’t ignore longer running causes of homelessness and reinforce stigmatising notions of people who are homeless as lacking agency. Our findings aid theorisation of how health inequalities shape pandemic progression: severe exclusion may substantially delay epidemics in some communities, although with considerable other non-COVID-19 impacts.

Highlights

  • In March 2020 there were concerns that COVID-19 infections and deaths would be high amongst people experiencing homelessness in the UK (Hamilton, 2020; Kirby, 2020) and globally (Tsai & Wilson, 2020)

  • This potential COVID-19 vulnerability was linked to pre-existing health inequalities for people experiencing homelessness and exclusion

  • Analysis here sought to understand how experiences of exclusion like homelessness relate to this developing theory of health inequalities and emerging epidemics. Across both studies 17 people experiencing homelessness were interviewed (5 women, 12 men), a total of 32 times, and 10 people working in outreach, hostels or homeless health service delivery

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Summary

Introduction

In March 2020 there were concerns that COVID-19 infections and deaths would be high amongst people experiencing homelessness in the UK (Hamilton, 2020; Kirby, 2020) and globally (Tsai & Wilson, 2020) This potential COVID-19 vulnerability was linked to pre-existing health inequalities for people experiencing homelessness and exclusion. W. Aldridge et al, 2017; Lewer et al, 2019; Rogans-Watson, Shulman, Lewer, Armstrong, & Hudson, 2020) Such inequalities overlap with potential limits on capacity to socially distance and maintain hygiene owing to poverty, long-running hardship and limited or lack of shelter and facilities (Hamilton, 2020)

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