COVID-19 increases risk for Canada’s ‘invisible’ homeless women: study
OTTAWA — A new research project shows women experiencing homelessness in Canada are largely invisible and falling through major gaps in support systems — and into dangerous situations.
The study, led by the Women’s National Housing and Homelessness Network, says the scope is dramatically underestimated because women are more likely to rely on precarious and sometimes dangerous support, such as by sleeping on couches or trading sex for housing.
This means the scale of homelessness among women, girls and gender-diverse people is larger than official estimates would suggest.
Kaitlin Schwan, senior researcher at the Canadian Observatory on Homelessness, says Canada’s emergency shelters were already turning away nearly 1,000 women and children a day before the COVID-19 pandemic hit.