Are We Comfortable With Homelessness?
- 8 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 262 (10) , 1375-1376
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1989.03430100109039
Abstract
THE AMERICAN poet John Bishop Peale wrote: "The most tragic thing about the war was not that it made so many dead men, but that it destroyed the tragedy of death. "1Two articles in this issue ofJAMAgive evidence that the greatest loss of the 1980s is that American homelessness and poverty are no longer tragedies but the acceptable cost of our affluence. Behind the cold statistics that Breakey et al2document lies human pain we who are affluent can scarcely imagine. "Comorbidity" is the operative term. The 9.2 medical problems per homeless person, the 91% rate of Axis 1 psychiatric disorders in women, the 85% rate of substance abuse (chiefly alcohol) in men: all testify to enormous suffering, much of it preventable. What is it like to suffer even from simple diarrhea when there are no public toilets and one must walk the streets from morningKeywords
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