Add thelocalreport.in As A
Trusted Source
According to the new data, in 2024, a record 1,611 homeless people, including 11 children, died, who used to play the shocking effect of bare bare. Britain’s Housing Crisis.
There were four children under one year of year and there was an increase of 9 percent in the coming year due to being homeless – 1,474 deaths in 2023, and 1,313 in 2022, research from museum Homeless revealed.
The homeless has been growing in recent years, 178,560 families evaluated as the homeless by the councils in 2023-24, increasing by 12.3 percent in the previous year.
More than half of the deaths recorded last year were classified as “death of despair”, which means that the person died of suicide or deaths were related to drugs or alcohol.
In one case, a person died within a week of being issued without a community treatment order from an NHS Mental Health Center, which would have seen him careful by doctors. The Barnabi Spiser, who had a history of psychosis, died in November 2024 after his release from the Redwoods Center in Shrusabari.
His family said that he had written mental health on concerns for the safety of Mr. Spiror before his death. The NHS Trust, which runs the Center, has allegedly initiated an internal investigation in the care of MR Spirkers.

In another case, an anonymous person was found dead inside a tent outside an ASDA supermarket in Lester in early December, in which the police did not suspect death.
In August last year, a 46 -year -old man, Alexander Callman, was also discovered dead inside the tent that he built his house. He was found by a walker at Rhinfield’s Fletors Hill Inclosure.
In another horrific case, a homeless man allegedly killed in July 2024, when he was trying to enter a house through a skylight.
According to the local newspaper, the Algerian refugeer of Camden, London, was discovered by Khalid Arribi by an estate agent. Ham and high, Paper reported that he was in a waiting list for consultation at the time of his death and was considered a very weak adult. His death was ruled by an accident by a coroner.
In the last three years, the ratio of Those who are dying in temporary housing, Including hotels, or supported housing has increased. Uday, including B&Bs and hostel deaths, has increased the increase in the number of deaths Home in this type of residence, Researchers found.
The data for the last year included 11 children, out of which four were children who had not yet reached their first birthday. Four other people were between one and nine years of age, and two children were aged 15 to 17, while the other was unknown.
Researchers stated that it is likely that the figures are lower than the correct scale of the issue, but the 2024 figure was above four in 2023. The dying homeless project began registering deaths in the absence of data from the office for national statistics in 2017.
The most recent government figures published in July, Shows the number of houses in temporary housing in England In the end of March 2025, a new record of 131,140 climbed high.
The number of children in temporary housing was 169,050 in March, which was from 151,540 from year to year. This was the highest figure since the record started in 1998.
In January, a report by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for homes in temporary housing states. 74 children, most children, in recent years in England, died with temporary housing Recorded as a possible contribution factor.
The Chief Executive of the homeless link, Rick Henderson, dying “tragic and unacceptable” in the number of homeless people, stating that it is a “clear indication of the homeless crisis we are facing”.
He said: “Not only more people are losing their home, but the increasing number of these people is already facing the needs of any health and social care, which only becomes homeless.”
Project Director Matthew Turtle called the government for “immediate action” and said how the data shows “ Homeless People failed deeply ”.
Franceska Albani from Charity Crisis said that more social housing was required to ensure that people had access to “cheap, settled houses”, and urged the government to remove housing benefits to prevent people from pushing into poverty. He said: “We are talking about real people including children here – not only the number.
The homeless minister Alison McGawn called the figure “heartbreaking” figures, saying: “We can’t just accept it normally.