Exploring barriers to integrated care for children under 5 living in temporary accommodation: a qualitative study of professionals’ experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic in England
Poppy Angelica Spaceman Pierce, Nadzeya Svirydzenka, Haleema Adil, Shereen Allaham, Matthew Ankers, Yvonne Karen Parry, Michelle Heys, Marcella Ucci, Monica Lakhanpaul

TL;DR
This study explores the challenges professionals face in providing integrated care for young children in temporary housing in England during the pandemic.
Contribution
The research identifies multilevel barriers to integrated care and offers tailored recommendations for improving service delivery.
Findings
Barriers include siloed practices, limited training, staffing shortages, and restrictive data-sharing policies.
Challenges reflect long-standing issues in service delivery, not just pandemic-specific problems.
Improved collaboration, training, and data-sharing are key to strengthening care for vulnerable children.
Abstract
This research aims to explore the factors that hinder professionals in delivering integrated care for children under 5 in temporary accommodation (TA) and understand their experiences of collaboration during the pandemic to inform recommendations. Semistructured qualitative interviews. England, UK. 45 professionals working across health, housing, education and non-profit sectors in England. Purposive and snowball sampling was employed to recruit a representation of key professionals across England. Those not eligible to take part in the study included people who did not work with families and/or children in TA settings. To explore cross-sector learnings that are applicable to improving integrated care and to tailor recommendations to the needs of families and children under 5 experiencing homelessness in the UK today. This study highlights the complex, multilevel barriers that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHomelessness and Social Issues · Child Welfare and Adoption · Healthcare innovation and challenges
