Volume 22, Number 4, 435-441, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-006-0046-7

Published in partnership with the

Logo

Dying on the Streets: Homeless Persons’ Concerns and Desires about End of Life Care

John Song, Dianne M. Bartels, Edward R. Ratner, Lucy Alderton, Brenda Hudson and Jasjit S. Ahluwalia

View Related Documents

Abstract

Background  

There is little understanding about the experiences and preferences at the end of life (EOL) for people from unique cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds. Homeless individuals are extreme examples of these overlooked populations; they have the greatest risk of death, encounter barriers to health care, and lack the resources and relationships assumed necessary for appropriate EOL care. Exploring their desires and concerns will provide insight for the care of this vulnerable and disenfranchised population, as well as others who are underserved.

Objective  

Explore the concerns and desires for EOL care among homeless persons.

Design  

Qualitative study utilizing focus groups.

Participants  

Fifty-three homeless persons recruited from agencies providing homeless services.

Measurements  

In-depth interviews, which were audiotaped and transcribed.

Results  

We present 3 domains encompassing 11 themes arising from our investigation, some of which are previously unreported. Homeless persons worried about dying and EOL care; had frequent encounters with death; voiced many unique fears, such as dying anonymously and undiscovered; favored EOL documentation, such as advance directives; and demonstrated ambivalence towards contacting family. They also spoke of barriers to EOL care and shared interventions to improve dying among the very poor and estranged.

Conclusions  

Homeless persons have significant personal experience and feelings about death, dying, and EOL care, much of which is different from those previously described in the EOL literature about other populations. These findings have implications not only for homeless persons, but for others who are poor and disenfranchised.

KEY WORDS  bioethics - homelessness - end-of-life care - focus groups - poverty

Potential Financial Conflict of Interest  None disclosed

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document