Aging
The number of Americans older than 65 will double in the next 40 years, reaching 80 million by 2040. Alongside this growth, many more older adults will need access to affordable and secure housing.
UCSF BHHI’s research on aging focuses on California’s older population, the housing supply available to older adults, affordability issues, the connection between housing, health, and public services, and the residential patterns of older homeless adults.
Related Resources
Our Research
Continued Homelessness and Depressive Symptoms in Older Adults
JAMA Network Open
August 15, 2024
Our Research
Continued Homelessness and Depressive Symptoms in Older Adults
JAMA Network Open
August 15, 2024
Depression is common in adults experiencing homelessness. In this cohort study, researchers examined the association between residential status and depressive symptoms in adults 50 years or older experiencing homelessness. Researchers found that continued homelessness was associated independently with increased odds of depressive symptoms.
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News
Thousands of Senior Citizens Are Dying Homeless in Los Angeles, Records Reveal
The Guardian
August 8, 2024
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News
Thousands of Senior Citizens Are Dying Homeless in Los Angeles, Records Reveal
The Guardian
August 8, 2024
More than 3,000 of the 11,500 people who died while unhoused in Los Angeles County between 2014 and 2023 were 60 and older. This crisis has grown over time. In a groundbreaking study on homelessness in California by Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative researchers found that nearly half of unhoused adults were age 50 and older. Margot Kushel, MD, director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative, said, "They talk about how ashamed and stigmatized they feel – they know the public thinks they’re bad because they’re outside. And they just feel incredibly alone in the world."
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Many Older Adults ‘Will Die Homeless,’ As Home Prices Surge and Safety Nets Fail
MarketWatch
June 11, 2024
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News
Many Older Adults ‘Will Die Homeless,’ As Home Prices Surge and Safety Nets Fail
MarketWatch
June 11, 2024
People over age 50 are the fastest-growing segment of people experiencing homelessness and makeup almost half of the total homeless population. These unhoused individuals typically have the health of someone 20 years older in the general population. DeDe Hancock, a CASPEH Lived Expertise Advisory Board member, discusses her own experience with becoming homeless when she was 52 years old, and Margot Kushel, MD, director of the UCSF Benioff Homelessness and Housing Initiative, outlines the health impacts of older adult homelessness. Ms. Hancock said, "I was going from shelter to shelter. Over seven years, I was out on the street for maybe five days - otherwise, I was in a shelter."
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