Co-developing SHELTER (Safe, Healthy Environments and Local Transformation for Equity and Resilience) with families with lived experience of homelessness in the New York City shelter system: A community needs assessment and data collection protocol
Diana Margot Rosenthal, Kate Guastaferro, Jasia Kubik, Melody Goodman

TL;DR
This study aims to understand the health and wellbeing needs of young children in NYC shelters by working with families who have experienced homelessness.
Contribution
The study introduces a community-based protocol to assess health needs of under-5s in shelters, co-developed with affected families.
Findings
Under-5s in shelters face significant health and developmental risks due to homelessness.
Current data on this population is insufficient and of poor quality in the U.S.
A mixed-methods protocol is proposed to identify barriers to health and wellbeing in shelter environments.
Abstract
In January 2025, the nightly census revealed that over 120,000 people were staying in New York City (NYC) shelters, including more than 41,000 children, of whom almost half were aged 0–5 years. Children under five years old (under-5s) experiencing homelessness are especially vulnerable because the first five years of life are a critical period for child growth, including approximately 90% of brain development. Furthermore, under-5s experiencing homelessness have a higher risk for multiple adverse childhood experiences, developing chronic health conditions, and recurrent homelessness across the life course. Data available for under-5s experiencing homelessness is generally lacking, and what is available is of notably poor quality in the United States, leaving a wide evidence gap and an inability to determine the actual needs of this population. This proposed protocol employs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHomelessness and Social Issues · Child Abuse and Trauma · Child Welfare and Adoption
