Publication | Open Access
Homeless and housed families in Los Angeles: a study comparing demographic, economic, and family function characteristics.
205
Citations
5
References
1990
Year
Social Determinants Of HealthSocial SciencesHousing ManagementFamily HealthFoster CarePovertyPublic HealthLos AngelesFamily RelationshipsHousingFamily HousingChild AbusePublic HousingDisadvantaged BackgroundResidential DevelopmentFamily EconomicsFamily Function CharacteristicsSociologyVulnerable PopulationAffordable HousingChild Abuse PreventionDemographyFamily HomelessnessHomelessness
Burdens of rising housing costs and family dysfunction among poor families in Los Angeles place many at risk for homelessness. The study surveyed 196 homeless and 194 housed poor families in Los Angeles to understand events that precipitate family homelessness. The research design involved collecting demographic, economic, and family function data from these families. Homeless and housed poor mothers were similar in age (≈29 years) and family size, both lived below poverty and spent about two‑thirds of income on housing, yet homeless mothers reported higher rates of spousal abuse, child abuse, drug use, mental health problems, weaker support networks, parental substance abuse, foster care, and cited economic pressures as primary drivers of homelessness.
We studied 196 homeless and 194 housed poor families in Los Angeles, California to gain an understanding of events that precipitate family homelessness. Both homeless and housed poor mothers averaged 29 years old and were accompanied by two or three children. Three-fourths of both the homeless and housed families had income below the poverty level, and both groups expended almost two-thirds of their income on housing. Mothers in homeless families more commonly reported spousal abuse (35 vs 16 percent), child abuse (28 vs 10 percent), drug use (43 vs. 30 percent), or mental health problems (14 vs 6 percent) and weaker support networks. Homeless mothers more commonly came from homes where their parents abused drugs or alcohol (49 vs 34 percent) or more commonly lived outside the home or in foster care (35 vs 25 percent). Homelessness was reported as due primarily to economic pressures of housing costs, but personal and family problems frequently played a contributing role, especially for single parent families. Burdens of increasing housing costs and family dysfunction among housed poor families place many at risk for homelessness.
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