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Making the invisible visible: a Photovoice exploration of homeless women's health and lives in central Auckland.

机译:使看不见的人可见:对奥克兰中心地区无家可归妇女的健康和生活进行的Photovoice探索。

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摘要

Women and the concept of homelessness are weakly connected in the international discourses on health and housing. This PhotoVoice study gave a sample of homeless women in central Auckland a camera with which to photograph their lives in order to voice their felt health needs as advocates and agents for positive change. Interviews explored the meanings given to street lives captured in the photographs and reveal threats to the women's mental health and worsening addictions. Their tight-knit, resilient community, including dogs, was seen as 'family' who provide support and protection. The women perceived social services as helping them survive and support their health, but not ending their homelessness. Barriers to them getting and staying off the street included a shortage of affordable, secure housing, which has also tended to become overcrowded. They identified their own leaders who could link with state housing services to implement and evaluate new homelessness programmes, such as Housing First.
机译:妇女和无家可归的概念在有关健康和住房的国际讨论中联系薄弱。这项PhotoVoice的研究为奥克兰中心地区的一个无家可归的妇女提供了一个照相机,可以用来照相生活,以表达她们作为积极改变的倡导者和推动者的健康需求。访谈探讨了照片中所捕捉到的街头生活的意义,揭示了对妇女心理健康的威胁和成瘾的加剧。他们的紧密联系,复原力强的社区(包括狗)被视为提供支持和保护的“家庭”。这些妇女认为社会服务可以帮助她们生存和支持她们的健康,但并不能消除她们的无家可归现象。他们出入街头的障碍包括负担得起的,安全的住房短缺,这也变得人满为患。他们确定了自己的领导人,他们可以与国家住房服务机构联手实施和评估新的无家可归计划,例如“住房优先”计划。

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