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Housing

‘Far too many lives cut short’ as homeless deaths rise 10% in Scotland

Statistics from the National Records of Scotland show 216 people died without a stable home in the country in 2019

Homeless deaths in Scotland

Scotland has the highest rate of homeless deaths of any UK country. Image credit: Ev/Unsplash

Preventing homelessness should become a “national priority” in Scotland, campaigners have said, after new statistics showed a 10 per cent rise in homeless deaths. 

An estimated 216 people died while sleeping in temporary accommodation or rough on Scotland’s streets in 2019 according to official National Records of Scotland figures.

The count is the second time Scotland has recorded official homeless death figures and showed 21 more deaths than in 2018. Half of all deaths were drug-related.

Jon Sparkes, chief executive of homelessnesss charity Crisis, insisted the figures show why homelessness needs to be prevented in the first place and said his organisation will be calling on all parties to make prevention a priority.

Sparkes said: “It’s truly heart-breaking that hundreds of people died without the dignity of a safe home. Behind these statistics are real people with families, friends and their own individual stories, and they must not be forgotten.

“Far too many lives have been cut short and many of these deaths will have been avoidable. We need to learn from these failings and put in place measures to stop this from happening in the future.”

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Statisticians only started recording homeless deaths in 2018 following the Bureau of Investigative Journalism’s Dying Homeless project and work from the Office for National Statistics to begin an official count in England and Wales.

Tuesday’s Scottish figures come a day after the Dying Homeless project – now run by the Museum of Homelessness – estimated 176 people died without a permanent home in Scotland in 2020 with 976 deaths across the UK as a whole.

And the latest official figures from the Office for National Statistics, released in December, estimated 778 people died without a secure home in England and Wales in 2019.

A spokesman for charity Homeless Network Scotland echoed Sparkes’ call for prevention and said: “Home is vital for good health, but homelessness is not always prevented or responded to quickly enough. We need to go further to ensure that when someone seeks help there is no wrong door.”

A majority of the 216 deaths counted in Scotland were male and the average man died at the age of 43. For women the average age was just 39 years old.

Each one of these deaths is a tragedy, representing some of the most vulnerable people in our society

The figures mean Scotland has the highest homeless death rate out of any country in the UK, with 52 deaths per million, compared to 18 in England and 14 in Wales. 

Housing Minister Kevin Stewart insisted the Scottish Government is “prioritising ending homelessness once and for all”, pointing to the £50 million Ending Homelessness Together fund’s focus on helping local authorities to find settled accommodation for those who need it.

Stewart also said efforts are being made to address drugs deaths in Scotland with £250 million backing the Scottish Government’s Drugs Death Taskforce to tackle homelessness, improve mental health services and links to addiction services.

He said: “Each one of these deaths is a tragedy, representing some of the most vulnerable people in our society. While this report is based on experimental statistics, its findings will help the Scottish Government to further understand the many issues affecting the most vulnerable in our society as we redouble our efforts to eradicate homelessness.”

The National Records for Scotland’s head of vital events Julie Ramsay stressed the statistics are “experimental” as the group work with the England and Wales’ Office for National Statistics to improve the methodology.

Currently both groups use death certificates to indicate whether a person died while homeless.

This differs from the method used in the Museum of Homelessness’ Dying Homeless project, where freedom of information requests, crowdsourced information and local news stories are used to keep count.

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