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by s1artibartfast 1691 days ago
Doesn't this just reinforce the point of the parent post, that there are two types of homelessness?

They are explicitly separating the worst cases from those like the working mother in the RV?

Looking at the 2019 report[1], the chronically homeless better fit the negative stereotype.

Sixty-three percent 63% of chronically homeless survey respondents reported alcohol or substance use. 53% reported living with a psychiatric or emotional condition, 52% with post-traumatic stress disorder, 48% with a chronic health problem, and 21% suffered from a traumatic brain injury

This is from self reported survey data, so the actual numbers could be more grim (e.g. problems not acknowledged or diagnosed).

https://hsh.sfgov.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/FINAL-PIT-R...

1 comments

If you check page 28 it shows the overall rate at 42% for substance abuse, 39% for mental health and 37% for PTSD. Your summary is from only the chronically homeless. That skews the data towards the people who are by definition the hardest to help.
Correct, This was my explicit intent. I posit that the chronically homeless are more disruptive, destructive, and harder to treat.

>Doesn't this just reinforce the point of the parent post, that there are two types of homelessness?

>They are explicitly separating the worst cases from those like the working mother in the RV?

>Looking at the 2019 report[1], the chronically homeless better fit the negative stereotype.