Normalisation of alcohol misuse and alcohol-related harms: a mixed methods analysis exploring alcohol misuse, morbidity and healthcare engagement in people experiencing homelessness
Normalisation of alcohol misuse and alcohol-related harms: a mixed methods analysis exploring alcohol misuse, morbidity and healthcare engagement in people experiencing homelessness
Aim: to understand the views and experiences of homeless adults who drink hazardously around alcohol use, alcohol harms and access to liver healthcare, and to quantify the prevalence of alcohol-related morbidity in this population.
Methods: a sample of homeless adults (aged 18+) who drink hazardously (AUDIT score ≥8) were recruited to complete a health and alcohol use survey. From this sample, a smaller sample was purposively selected for semi-structured interview. Participants were recruited via liver outreach clinics held in five homeless hostels/day-centres in Southampton. Using a critical realist approach, qualitative data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and descriptive statistics produced for survey responses.
Results: 56 survey participants were recruited, 84% of whom had probable alcohol dependence and 18% a diagnosis of advanced liver fibrosis/cirrhosis. Themes identified from ten interviews described the ubiquity of alcohol misuse and harms in the life-histories of people experiencing homelessness (PEH), the differing levels of understanding and risk recognition of alcohol-related harms, and how PEH rationalise hazardous drinking, despite the risks. Normalisation of alcohol misuse and harms underlies these themes and likely contributes to feelings of fatalism and powerlessness to prevent these harms.
Conclusions: normalisation of alcohol-related harms may represent a barrier to timely engagement with healthcare and a mechanism driving greater likelihood of alcohol-related harms in PEH. Improving knowledge around alcohol-related harms and healthcare may help to counter the misperceptions of risk and fatalistic attitudes that normalisation fosters. Such intervention may be particularly effective for PEH if targeted towards those accessing hostels and day-centres.
Wells, Catherine
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Dewar-Haggart, Rachel
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Glyn-Owen, Kate
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Stevens, Hannah
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Parkes, Julie
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Kim, Yun
64eac7a5-6635-4cdd-9562-29f44aa97ad6
Buchanan, Ryan M.
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Wells, Catherine
ed76c8fc-3cb3-4923-ac6b-45c64b87cd3f
Dewar-Haggart, Rachel
d592b6a9-017b-4470-9ebd-b6ec272b7213
Glyn-Owen, Kate
046b9ac1-ab79-4786-af26-f1a2f96ddc05
Stevens, Hannah
0057292f-f821-4f7a-a6bb-3ff5dc1e4b92
Parkes, Julie
59dc6de3-4018-415e-bb99-13552f97e984
Kim, Yun
64eac7a5-6635-4cdd-9562-29f44aa97ad6
Buchanan, Ryan M.
9499f713-f684-4046-be29-83cd9d6f834d
Wells, Catherine, Dewar-Haggart, Rachel, Glyn-Owen, Kate, Stevens, Hannah, Parkes, Julie, Kim, Yun and Buchanan, Ryan M.
(2025)
Normalisation of alcohol misuse and alcohol-related harms: a mixed methods analysis exploring alcohol misuse, morbidity and healthcare engagement in people experiencing homelessness.
Alcohol and Alcoholism.
(Submitted)
Abstract
Aim: to understand the views and experiences of homeless adults who drink hazardously around alcohol use, alcohol harms and access to liver healthcare, and to quantify the prevalence of alcohol-related morbidity in this population.
Methods: a sample of homeless adults (aged 18+) who drink hazardously (AUDIT score ≥8) were recruited to complete a health and alcohol use survey. From this sample, a smaller sample was purposively selected for semi-structured interview. Participants were recruited via liver outreach clinics held in five homeless hostels/day-centres in Southampton. Using a critical realist approach, qualitative data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis and descriptive statistics produced for survey responses.
Results: 56 survey participants were recruited, 84% of whom had probable alcohol dependence and 18% a diagnosis of advanced liver fibrosis/cirrhosis. Themes identified from ten interviews described the ubiquity of alcohol misuse and harms in the life-histories of people experiencing homelessness (PEH), the differing levels of understanding and risk recognition of alcohol-related harms, and how PEH rationalise hazardous drinking, despite the risks. Normalisation of alcohol misuse and harms underlies these themes and likely contributes to feelings of fatalism and powerlessness to prevent these harms.
Conclusions: normalisation of alcohol-related harms may represent a barrier to timely engagement with healthcare and a mechanism driving greater likelihood of alcohol-related harms in PEH. Improving knowledge around alcohol-related harms and healthcare may help to counter the misperceptions of risk and fatalistic attitudes that normalisation fosters. Such intervention may be particularly effective for PEH if targeted towards those accessing hostels and day-centres.
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Submitted date: 16 October 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 506887
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506887
ISSN: 0735-0414
PURE UUID: 9c24f92b-07b2-43a2-ae5d-51262fe9f273
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2025 17:47
Last modified: 20 Nov 2025 03:04
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Contributors
Author:
Catherine Wells
Author:
Rachel Dewar-Haggart
Author:
Kate Glyn-Owen
Author:
Hannah Stevens
Author:
Yun Kim
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