A national study of Indigenous youth homelessness in Canada.

Authors

Kidd, S.A., Thistle, J., Beaulieu, T., O'Grady, B., & Gaetz, S.

Type
Journal Article
Year published
2019
Journal
Journal of Public Health
Attachments
Document
Kidd_2019.pdf (341.81 KB)
Title

A national study of Indigenous youth homelessness in Canada.

Volume and issue

176,

Abstract

"Objective
This study was designed to address the need for more detailed information about Indigenous homeless youth, a group overrepresented in the homeless population, using a national-level data set.
Study design
The study used a cross-sectional, self-report survey design.
Methods
Surveys were used to gather demographic, mental health, and quality of life data from a sample of 1103 Canadian youth accessing homeless services with data collected in 2015. This article focused on the 332 Indigenous respondents, using both comparisons with non-Indigenous youth and within-group comparisons across key domains.
Results
These findings suggested greater mental health and addiction challenges among Indigenous homeless youth compared with non-Indigenous respondents as well as evidence of a more problematic role of child protection. Within-group comparisons suggested that female and sexual and gender minority youth are particularly at risk among Indigenous youth with some added child protection and justice implications for reserve-raised youth. Child protection history and street-victimization were particularly relevant to the current distress levels.
Conclusion
Overall, such findings reinforce calls for Indigenous-specific interventions for these populations—including policy-driven prevention initiatives to address the legacy of colonization.
"