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How to help slow the spread of COVID-19 among people living homeless

People experiencing homelessness are particularly vulnerable to outbreaks of infectious disease. COVID-19 is the most recent and deeply concerning example of that threat. For a population with higher levels of underlying health conditions, less access to resources necessary to stay healthy, and a greater likelihood of living in congregate settings like shelters, this all adds up to an increased risk for infection and severe illness.

For these reasons, slowing the spread of COVID-19 amongst people living homeless and the service providers supporting them is a priority. Public Health – Seattle & King County keeps a careful eye on disease activity and testing efforts at local homeless service provider sites, to act quickly when needed.

Now, the public can see the status of those efforts on a new public data dashboard.

In recent weeks the rate of newly confirmed COVID-19 cases amongst people experiencing homelessness in King County has slowed significantly, and the overall number of cases in this population has flattened. Keeping these numbers low requires ongoing work – particularly by maintaining the “de-intensification” of congregate shelters, which creates extra physical space by reducing the number of people inside any given facility. Ensuring the use of cloth face coverings and adequate access to hygiene resources also make a big difference.

Slowing the spread of COVID-19 is a coordinated effort across the homeless service system, which includes shelters, day centers, encampments, permanent and transitional supportive housing programs, health care providers, outreach workers and people experiencing homelessness. In addition, King County’s Department of Community and Human Services and the City of Seattle’s Human Services Department are key partners in the effort.

“Local homeless service providers and outreach workers have substantially changed how they deliver services in order to protect their clients against COVID-19,” said TJ Cosgrove, Homelessness Response Chief for Public Health – Seattle & King County. “We’re grateful for their partnership, impressed by their rapid innovation and share their ongoing commitment to reducing the risk of threatening outbreaks.”

These collaborative efforts fall into three categories:

Making spaces safer

Infection control, outbreak response and testing

Ongoing supplies and support for homeless shelter sites

Public Health is also planning additional efforts to slow COVID-19 in shelters. Proactive support for service sites will be increased to continue meeting recommendations for hygiene, physical distancing, and infection control. Clinical teams will be deployed for proactive testing for congregate shelters, encampments, and other homeless service sites that are at increased vulnerability for future outbreaks.

Originally published July 10, 2020.

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