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Journal Article

Citation

Oddy M, Moir JF, Fortescue D, Chadwick S. Brain Inj. 2012; 26(9): 1058-1064.

Affiliation

The Disabilities Trust Foundation .

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699052.2012.667595

PMID

22571822

Abstract

Primary objective: The main aim of the study was to investigate the prevalence of traumatic brain injury in a sample of homeless individuals. Research design: The researchers employed a cross-sectional survey design and contacted 12 organizations providing services for homeless individuals across a city in the UK. Methods and procedures: The sample included 100 homeless participants (75 males and 25 females) who met the inclusion criteria. A matched control group (nā€‰=ā€‰100) of individuals who were not homeless was also recruited. A questionnaire was administered to all participants to elicit information relating to history of possible traumatic brain injury. Main outcomes and results: Results indicated that a significantly higher number of homeless participants (48%) reported a history of traumatic brain injury than control participants (21%). Of those homeless participants, 90% indicated they had sustained their first traumatic brain injury before they were homeless. Conclusions: These findings suggest that rates of traumatic brain injury are much higher among the homeless population than in the general population and that sustaining a traumatic brain injury may be a risk factor for homelessness.


Language: en

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