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Life Chances and Choices: Assessing Quality of Life among the Homeless
56
Citations
71
References
2001
Year
Quality Of LifeLife AssessmentSocial DeterminantsSocial Determinants Of HealthSocial SciencesHomeless PeopleSocial Choice VariablesPovertySouthern Metropolitan AreaPublic HealthHousingPublic PolicySocial ConditionLife SatisfactionLivabilityLife ChancesSociologyVulnerable PopulationAffordable HousingAssessing QualityMedicineHomelessness
AbstractA Weberian lifestyles approach is employed to examine differences in quality of life among the homeless. Using a systematic random sample of 161 homeless people in a mid-sized, Southern metropolitan area, the study focuses on the impact of life chances and social choices on aspects of quality of life in this severely challenged population. Regression results show that a number of life chance and social choice variables affect general and domain-specific well-being. While chances and choices both contribute to these aspects of quality of life, there is only modest evidence of a mediating effect. With the exception of depressive symptoms, life chances appear to play a more important role in quality of life differences than life choices. The specific life chance and choice factors influencing aspects of quality of life vary with each separate well-being outcome. The implications of these findings for general sociology and homeless social policy are explored.
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