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Ireland’s inflexible healthcare system excludes homeless from mental health services, reports new study

5 June 2025

Ireland鈥檚 homeless are being routinely excluded from mental health services due to a rigid and inflexible healthcare system, according to a new report.

A significant issue identified is the exclusion of individuals with dual diagnoses, those with both a mental health condition and substance use disorder.

This exclusion leads to a cycle where individuals with substance use disorders are denied psychiatric care because of their addiction, and their mental health continues to deteriorate.

This is according to , 小鸟体育 School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, lead author on 鈥Review of Crisis Mental Health Support within Inclusion Health鈥.

Revealing systemic and structural barriers preventing people experiencing homelessness in Ireland from accessing timely and appropriate mental health care, the new report is based on in-depth interviews with frontline clinicians and service leaders working in homeless healthcare.

A key issue raised was the fragmentation of services, where housing, healthcare, mental health, and addiction services operate in silos rather than providing integrated care.

Interviewees noted that the current system places unrealistic expectations on service users to navigate multiple layers of bureaucracy, which can be overwhelming and unachievable for people experiencing homelessness.

鈥淐lients go all around the city to get a wound dressed here, meds there, and methadone over there. It would be impossible for somebody who鈥檚 housed, working, and fully educated to keep up with that level of access to care,鈥 said one service provider.

鈥淗omeless services are stuck between a rock and a hard place. We don鈥檛 provide mental health care; we鈥檙e not funded to provide mental health care. Yet, the vast majority of our clients have mental health needs and some kind of mental health diagnosis,鈥 reported another.

Other significant barriers identified include restrictive eligibility criteria, poor service coordination, long waiting lists, and the transient nature of homelessness itself.

Highlighted were the issue of catchment areas, which prevent homeless individuals from accessing mental health services unless they have a registered address in the area.

鈥淭he mental health system鈥檚 strict reliance on catchment areas makes it incredibly difficult to access care. Homeless people don鈥檛 fit into these boundaries, and as a result, many don鈥檛 receive any support,鈥 reported one hospital consultant.   

Conducted in collaboration with , the report identifies eight key recommendations including the integration of mental health, addiction, and housing services, the expansion of trauma-informed training, and the need to reform the Mental Health Act to enable earlier intervention before individuals reach crisis point.

鈥淲e are immensely grateful to the clinicians, service leaders, and members of our expert advisory group who generously shared their time and expertise,鈥 said Dr Gilmore.

鈥淭heir insights were invaluable in shaping the report鈥檚 findings and recommendations.

鈥淚 would also like to thank the Irish Research Council, now Research Ireland, for funding this work. Their support made it possible to foreground the voices of those working on the frontline of Ireland鈥檚 homelessness and mental health systems.鈥

Speaking on the launch of the report, SafetyNet CEO Nicola Perry said it 鈥渓ays bare the systemic barriers that too often prevent people experiencing homelessness from accessing the mental health care they urgently need鈥.

鈥淚t echoes what our clinicians see every day, compassionate, effective support is possible, but only if services are flexible, trauma-informed, and truly integrated.鈥

By: David Kearns, Digital Journalist / Media Officer, 小鸟体育 University Relations

To contact the 小鸟体育 News & Content Team, email: newsdesk@ucd.ie