Transcript Slide 1

What more can we do for rough
sleepers?
• Setting the Scene
• Harm Reduction
• What’s missing?
Tracey Hughes – East Kent Substance Misuse Team
Setting the Scene – the Strategy
No one should have to sleep rough. In this strategy we
now signal our intent to work with our partners to end
rough sleeping by 2012. To make that happen we want to
make sure that in every part of the country people get the
help they need, so no one has to sleep rough. Services
will act to prevent rough sleeping, or to bring people in as
quickly as possible. People who have slept rough will be
supported to improve their health, consider employment
options and rebuild their lives.
No One Left Out - Communities ending rough sleeping.
CLG November 2008
No One Left Out
Key Principles:
•
Preventing people sleeping rough – tackling the flows of
new rough sleepers onto the streets
• Diverting people from the streets as quickly as possible –
so no one needs to stay sleeping rough and to avoid
people becoming entrenched and developing or
exacerbating problems such as poor mental health,
substance misuse and physical health
• Sustaining people in accommodation and their
communities to prevent them returning to the streets in
the future.
The Numbers……………
In June 2009:
464 people were sleeping rough on any single night in England.
263 of these were in London &110 were in Westminster.
Outside London:
Bath 10
Bedford 10
Chester 9
Liverpool 9
Manchester 9
The Local Picture
On Wednesday 25 November 2009
Total found
rough sleeping
Evidence of how
many more?
East Kent (incl Swale)
West Kent
Medway
13
5
5
14
12
5
Total
23
31
25.11.09
25.11.09
75 people were accessing Kent Outreach Service
123 people on waiting list for Porchlight’s rough
sleeper support
What is harm reduction?
Harm reduction is a term that defines policies, programmes,
services and actions that work to reduce the
health
social and
economic harms
to individuals, communities and society that are associated
with the use of drugs (Newcombe 1992)
Working together
Social
Health
Economic
What is Harm Reduction?
• Advice and information for all – substance users, family,
friends, carers
• Safer injecting & needle and syringe exchanges
• Overdose prevention
• BBV testing and vaccination
• Sexual health
• Gateway to services
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Self- Actualisation
growth & fulfilment
Esteem
achievement, status, responsibility
Social needs
friends, family, relationships & affection
Safety needs
protection, security, stability
Physiological needs
air, food, water, shelter, warmth, sleep
A useful model?
Abraham Maslow introduced the hierarchy of need in his paper
1943 paper A Theory of Human Motivation.
We all have 5 levels of need:
physiological – air, food, water, shelter
security – a feeling of security (money & housing etc)
social – friends, family and relationships
self esteem – status, position, confidence
self actualisation – reaching your full potential
The Mystery Shopper Experience
“It felt a bit like a computer game where you had to get to
the different levels and you get through to the second
level and you might get through to the third level but
ultimately, on a number of occasions, I’ve been able to get
up a few levels but you still can’t get any kind of help”
A mystery shopper from “No One’s Priority” Crisis July 2009
Where Do We Go From Here………