Diabetes care for people experiencing homelessness in the UK: insights from a national survey of frontline professionals and the development of an integrated care model

Daniela Oehring*, Martha Paisi, Mona Nasser, Theo Jackson, Ryan Young, Lynne Wooff, Helen Partridge, Jacqueline Conaty, Samantha Dorney-Smith

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Introduction: People experiencing homelessness (PEH) face food insecurity, unstable housing and fragmented services that render conventional diabetes pathways unworkable and amplify complications.

Methods: Between January and April 2024, we conducted a nationwide, cross-sectional mixed-methods survey of front-line professionals via NHS, inclusion-health and voluntary-sector networks, analysing quantitative data (n = 104) with ANOVA, Kruskal–Wallis tests and ordinal logistic regression, and subjecting free-text responses to reflexive thematic analysis, before converging findings to develop the Integrated Holistic Diabetes Care Model for Homelessness (IHD-CMPH).

Results: Respondents comprised specialist diabetes clinicians (31%), homelessness/inclusion-health staff (38%) and VCSE providers (32%); median perceived Type 1 prevalence among PEH was 20% versus 8% nationally (p < 0.001). Fifty-seven per cent rated diabetes outcomes for PEH as poor or very poor, and 66% reported more frequent amputations and vision loss. Clear organisational policies (OR 1.62, 95% CI 1.06–2.48), cross-sector collaboration (OR 2.76, 1.20–6.36) and outreach-specific training (OR 2.50, 1.50–4.17) were independently associated with better outcomes. Thematic analysis highlighted service fragmentation, inflexible appointments and insufficient homelessness-specific education.

Discussion: Diabetes inequities among PEH stem chiefly from modifiable structural failures rather than patient non-adherence. The novel IHD-CMPH, anchored in outreach and mobile screening, provides a scalable framework to operationalise inclusion-health policy, improve glycaemic surveillance and avert avoidable admissions; this first national study translating multi-sector front-line evidence into a coherent policy model offers concrete levers for health-system reform and equity advancement.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1672014
JournalFrontiers in Public Health
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • ill-housed persons
  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Healthcare Disparities
  • Patient Care Management
  • Health Services Accessibility
  • homelessness
  • Care Delivery

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