Homeless Deaths Record High

The Multnomah County Health Department’s annual review of deaths among people experiencing homelessness has found that during calendar year 2022, at least 315 people died without a home of their own. The number counted in 2022 is the highest since Multnomah County began its analysis, in part because a new data source was added this year.

For the first time, the total includes both the accidental or suspicious deaths investigated by the Multnomah County Medical Examiner — 249 — as well as the deaths of 66 people who died at the hospital or under medical care and whose deaths were tallied from death certificates recorded by funeral homes. Hospital and medical care deaths numbers were included after Senate Bill 850 established mandatory reporting of housing status at death.

Because the County has long tracked deaths investigated by the Medical Examiner — the first jurisdiction in the state to do so — it can chart changes in that subset year over year. The 249 deaths in 2022 investigated by the Medical Examiner is up from 193 deaths in 2021. Medical Examiner deaths among people experiencing homelessness have jumped 29% on average every year between 2018 and 2022 — although that average is affected by larger increases recorded during and since the COVID-19 pandemic.

Deaths among the entire population of Multnomah County also rose in 2022. But the risk of an unhoused person dying a preventable death is starkly obvious. People experiencing homelessness were 45 times more likely to die from a transportation-related injury, 37 times more likely to die from a drug overdose, 32 times more likely to die from homicide, 18 times more likely to die from suicide and six times more likely to die from any cause compared to the general population.

Each year Multnomah County undertakes the Domicile Unknown report in partnership with Street Roots to determine the number, characteristics and causes of deaths among people experiencing homelessness in Multnomah County. Domicile Unknown is intended to help the public, elected officials and social service providers identify resources and policies that can save lives.

Since the Multnomah County Health Department and Medical Examiner began tracking deaths among people who were homeless in 2011, at least 1,274 people have died while unhoused.

The findings in this report direct policy decisions and guide efforts by the County Chair, County departments and the Joint Office of Homeless Services. In recent years, and all the way through the past several weeks, County officials have worked to expand shelters — including day shelters and services — respond more effectively to severe weather, coordinate plans across the homeless response system and behavioral healthcare to better address fentanyl and polysubstance use, and collaborate more closely with jurisdictions including the City of Portland, east County cities and neighboring counties.

“The raw and human costs of this crisis are moving in the wrong direction,” said Chair Jessica Vega Pederson. “The loss of these lives is beyond humbling, and today we sit with the full weight of these losses as a County and a community. Drug overdoses, traffic fatalities, and homicides were major contributors, and our homelessness response system must become more coordinated and effective to address these issues and reverse these trends. People’s lives depend on it.” 

Leading causes of death 

Of the at least 315 people who died while experiencing homelessness in 2022, 245 — 78% — were people assigned male at birth, and 70 — 22% — were people assigned female at birth. Their average age was 49 — 30 years younger than the age at which the average County resident might expect to die. 

The largest proportion of deaths — 144 — were accidental or unintentional, and 85% of those were from drug overdoses. Most people had a combination of drugs in their system, but the most common substances were methamphetamine, and opioids, mainly fentanyl.

Of the 123 deaths associated with drug or alcohol toxicity, methamphetamines caused or contributed to 100 of those deaths, or 81% of all drug- or alcohol-related homeless deaths. 

Fentanyl caused or contributed to 74 deaths among people experiencing homelessness in 2022 — more than double the number the year before and a sign of how rapidly the risk of overdose from the synthetic opioid has emerged. In the five years since fentanyl was first recorded as contributing to a death, one person died in 2017, two died in each of the following years, followed by four in 2020, and then 36 in 2021.

The increase in fentanyl-related deaths among people experiencing homelessness aligns with national trends, especially in the western United States, where fentanyl has become increasingly available.

Traffic crashes 

Traffic deaths made up the second-largest number of accidental deaths, with 14 people dying from crashes, or 10% of all unintentional deaths. That also mirrors a national trend in which pedestrian deaths reported by the U.S. Department of Transportation have increased every year for the past five years. 

A Multnomah County Health Department study of traffic crash deaths between 2012 and 2021 found that people experiencing homelessness face disproportionate risks, accounting for 24% of all traffic deaths in 2020 and 2021. Researchers found the higher rate and risk of traffic deaths among this group results from the combination of living in near-road environments and a higher level of exposure by virtue of being outside much of the time.

For the three families who participated in this year’s report, each lost a loved one who was walking along or crossing one of the region’s most traveled arterials: John Ellstrom walked on the Morrison Bridge, Angela C. Boyd crossed Powell Boulevard and Jeremy Hofmann walked on Highway 99 East.

“In recent years, we've been horrified by the marked rise in traffic fatalities — especially deaths of people while walking, while experiencing homelessness, and young people. This public health epidemic is preventable but only with timely attention and action from the government at every level, said Sarah Iannarone, director of The Street Trust, which works to make streets safer for the most vulnerable people.

“The issue may seem complex, but at the core, it’s quite simple: speed, impairment and distraction contribute to over 90% of vehicle crashes in the U.S., and we have the power locally and with the help of the state to take immediate action and make lasting investments to save lives.”

Homicide and Self-harm

Twenty-five people were killed while experiencing homelessness in 2022, the largest number of homicides since Multnomah County began producing Domicile Unknown in 2011, mirroring the increase in homicides among the population overall reported by the Portland Police Bureau. Seventeen people died by suicide, more than double the reported number from 2021.

Weather and deaths by month

On average, 26 people died each month, with the fewest dying in June — 18 — and the most in November, when 42 people died. One person died of heat, in July, and two others died of cold, one in November and another in December.

Chronic and communicable diseases

While drug overdoses, traffic injuries and homicides were major factors, people experiencing homelessness also died of chronic disease, such as heart disease, and communicable diseases, including COVID-19.

Housing and shelter — as well as the social, economic and environmental factors that underlie the causes of excess deaths among people experiencing homelessness — must continue to be considered to develop policies that can save lives and prevent premature death.

“We can, and must, keep finding policy fixes. We can, and must, keep fighting for people to stay alive,’’ said Kaia Sand, executive director of Street Roots.

“But the fact that a person dies of homelessness almost every day in Multnomah County is an indictment of something deeper, societal, and national. It is an indictment of the systems and safety nets that break and fray, or never even exist at all, leaving people to end up on our streets.”

Source: Multnomah County


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