Please note you have the choice of two live streams to watch. Stream A below covers all plenary sessions and all breakout sessions in STREAM A. Stream B can be watched here and covers all breakout sessions in STREAM B. Where available breakout sessions in STREAM C, D and E have been pre-recorded by our speakers and are available to watch on demand – these are hyperlinked on the Agenda – simply open the appropriate day of the symposium agenda and click on the breakout title to watch the session.


LIVE STREAM
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BREAKOUT SESSIONS
Concurrent sessions run throughout both days of this symposium.
Please use the links below to access these breakout sessions at the appropriate times, check the agenda for full details of all breakout sessions.
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Streams B, C & D: Where available online breakout sessions are hyperlinked on the Agenda – simply open the appropriate day of the symposium agenda and click on the breakout title to watch the session.
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WELCOME TO PATHWAYS FROM HOMELESSNESS 2025
Follow the symposium hashtag on social media #InclusionHealth2025 – follow Pathway on X https://x.com/PathwayUK and BlueSky https://bsky.app/profile/pathwayuk.bsky.social
Welcome to the live stream of the Pathways from Homelessness 2025 Symposium.
Our theme this year, from the margins to the mainstream, pathways to prevent homelessness reflects the strength of our collective knowledge that can be applied in so many mainstream areas in housing and health.
We know what to do to tackle the complex causes and needs of homelessness, how to make care better and how to best support people to improve their lives even when they have experienced the most profound exclusions but are not yet on the streets.
But it also reflects our deep frustrations: that specialist services remain marginalised in so many parts of the country; that wider forces in society continue to push people to the margins as hard as we work to include and bring people in; and that mainstream health, housing and social care services could learn so much more from our work.
While NHS finances feel like they have never been tighter and local authorities across the country are gradually facing bankrupcy by temporary accommodation costs, we know that clever Government officials are busy on the Secretary of State’s new Ten Year Plan for the NHS.
What we can propose and implement:
• Commit to radical funding reform and reallocation, so that commissioners really can target extra resources on people and groups with the highest needs for prevention and recovery.
• Lead the system to routinely include the most marginalised in the design and delivery of services, because we know it is the best way to create things that work for people and prevent the revolving door of homelessness.
• Challenge the NHS to genuinely work beyond its boundaries – connecting with local government and housing providers, creating services that catch people when they fall or, better, before they fall, support people for the long term and, connecting back to the health service’s founding principles, leads the way in changing how our society treats the most marginalised and vulnerable who now include 160,000 children in temporary accommodation.
At this year’s Pathways health and housing specialist conference we will hear about destitution among asylum seekers, the awful risks and harms experienced by women and children stuck in homelessness and how violence blights so many people’s lives when they are forced to survive on extreme margins of society.
At the same time, and as every year, our programme gives us much to be hopeful about. We have a series of papers about how services can best respond to women’s specific needs, how to really listen to women’s voices, and how, in so many areas, understanding the psychology of trauma needs to underpin what we do.
We have evidence of what works in addiction, new thinking about how to challenge stigma and structural exclusion, both how to find and the crucial value to the system, of including hidden or missing patients – in primary care and in hospital – and what we can and should practically do now: to improve diabetes management, to act on (mal)nutrition and much more. And, of course, across the programme we have peer and lived experience voices and perspectives to listen to and inform change.
Alex Bax, Chief Executive, Pathway
AGENDA
Please click on the tabs below to see the seminar agenda for each day of this event.
10.00 – 11.15 PLENARY SESSION ONE
WHY ARE WE HERE?
Chair’s opening remarks
Alex Bax, Chief Executive and Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, Pathway
A patient we cannot forget
Elizabeth Keat, Homeless Integration Lead, Leeds Community Healthcare
Keynote Address: How should we respond to violence?
Professor Martin Griffiths CBE, Clinical Director, Violence Reduction, NHS London
Women’s experiences of severe and multiple disadvantage: a call to action
Professor Sarah Johnsen, Chair in Homelessness and Inclusion Health, University of Edinburgh
Panel discussion and Q&A
Above speakers plus Gareth Davis and Ross Mayo, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members
11.15 – 11.45 REFRESHMENT BREAK
11.45 – 13.15 BREAKOUT SESSIONS STREAM 1
STREAM A1: WOMEN AND FAMILIES IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Women’s experiences of homelessness in high income contexts: Evidence from a meta-ethnographic systematic review
Maxine Radcliffe, Service Director, Health Service Executive
Reducing health inequalities for families experiencing homelessness
Angie Ouattara, Maternal Health Lead, Shared Health Foundation
Exploring Maternity Experiences and Perinatal Mortality in the Gypsy Traveller Community: Insights from Art Based Research Project
Barbara Czyznikowska, Community Engagement and Inclusion Manager, Centre for Ethnic Health Research, University of Leicester and Elisabeth Naylor, Artist and Sculptor
“The best decision I’ve made in years!” Putting women experiencing homelessness at the heart of a women’s health hub
Liz Thomas, Homeless Health Nurse, Urban Village Medical Practice
STREAM B1: LEARNING FROM AROUND THE GLOBE
The Better Health and Housing Program
Claire Doherty, Senior Research and Evaluation Officer, St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne
Preventing and reducing homelessness among people with acquired brain injury: a first step in the search for solutions
William Jubinville, Occupational Therapist and PhD Student, Université de Montréal
Ericare pathways to stability: from lived experience to youth homelessness solutions
Erica Moseley, Homeless Problem Solver/ Community Developer
Burden of disease of the people experiencing homelessness in Chile
Miguel Harfagar, Director, Fundación Salud Calle, Santiago, Chile
STREAM C1: SPECIALIST PSYCHOLOGY IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Learning from the co-designed HOME (Homeless, older and experiencing memory problems) intervention
Dr Penny Rapaport, Principal Research Fellow and Honorary Clinical Psychologist, Division of Psychiatry, University College London and Charlie Beeson, Research Assistant, University College London
Understanding healthcare exclusion: a meta-ethnography of homeless individuals’ healthcare experiences
Elizabeth Scott, Trainee Clinical Psychologist and Teaching Fellow, OutcomeHome and University of Southampton
Safe space psychotherapy – a new approach to gender and trauma informed talking therapy
Kate John, Women’s Recovery Co-ordinator, St Mungo’s
Centring lived experience voices and experiential expertise in the evaluation of the psychology offer in Crisis’ homelessness services
Raj Hazzard, Senior Researcher, McPin Foundation; Andrew Ashley, Nicholas Couchman and Thomas Inman, Experience Co Researchers, Crisis
STREAM D1: CO-PRODUCED PODCAST: JOURNEYS IN DUAL DIAGNOSIS AND HOMELESSNESS
The podcast explores personal journeys from a non-medical and medical lived experience perspective, in the hope of encouraging conversations around these issues, aiming for better outcomes for everyone affected.
Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, Pathway, Mark Banyan and Ross Mayo, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members
STREAM E1: EXTENSIVE CARE: COULD INTEGRATED COMMUNITY TEAMS PROMOTE INCLUSION HEALTH?
Extensive care: could integrated community teams promote inclusion health?
Neil Singh, Senior General Practice Teaching Fellow, University of Brighton
12.45 – 14.00 LUNCH BREAK
13.15 – 13.45 LUNCH AND LEARN
13.00 – 13.20 LUNCH AND LEARN
Tackling homelessness – a perspective from California
Professor Margot Kushel, Professor of Medicine and Division Chief at Division of Health Equity and Society, Zuckerberg San Franscisco General Hospital
(Video presentation and Q&A)
The best for baby film (20 min video)
Introduced by Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow Health
The Best for Baby Revolution film tells the story of having a baby while in the UK asylum system. The film has been written by and stars, Creative Influencers, a group of mothers with lived experience of having a baby whilst seeking asylum. The film has been made as part of a training resource for midwives, with the hope it can inform training and policy on a wider scale. It is an important and hard-hitting piece, informed by personal narrative as well as national research and policy, while also managing to inspire and promote a message of hope.
14.00 – 15.00 BREAKOUT SESSIONS STREAM 2
STREAM A2: BRINGING DATA INTO THE MAINSTREAM
Deaths of people experiencing homelessness: A mixed-methods analysis of death reviews in Oxfordshire 2018-2023
Dr Riley Botelle, Resident Doctor, Wexham Park Hospital, Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust
MASST – Multi Agency Safeguarding and Support Team
Kerry Gilbert, Matron, Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust
Inception of an inclusion health service at Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin – a needs analysis
Dr Kaitlyn O’Brien, Medical Senior House Officer, Tallaght University Hospital Dublin, Ireland
STREAM B2: IMPROVING PRACTICE
It’s OK to ask sensitive questions but….
Dr Amy Stevens, Public Health Lead, Bevan CIC
Working together to remove barriers
Dr Fiona Meth, Director of Practice, School of Healthcare, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Leeds
Bridging gaps: co-producing service change in primary care for and with people with severe and multiple disadvantage
Dr Lucy Potter, GP Academic, Bristol University
STREAM C2: MAINSTREAMING SPECIALIST WORKING
Introducing a working model and then bringing it to life
Anthony Pickup, Involvement and Inclusion Manager, MEAM
How can we best support peer workers to enable them to support those experiencing homelessness and problem substance use? Insights from the SHARPS study
Dr Jen Boyd, Research Fellow, University of Stirling
STREAM D2: DELIVERING HOUSING AND ENDING HOMELESSNESS
How do we join ambitions around delivering housing and ending homelessness? The role of inclusion health
Sarah Finnegan, Head of Policy, National Housing Federation
Jasmine Basran, Head of Policy and Campaigns), Crisis
15.00 – 15.30 REFRESHMENT BREAK
15.30 – 17.00 PLENARY SESSION TWO
MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE: NEW NATIONAL RESEARCH ON INEQUITIES IN HEALTHCARE ACCESS ACROSS ENGLAND
Chair’s introduction
Jo Dawes, NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow
Introduction to the UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Dr Serena Luchenski, Clinical Associate Professor & Honorary Public Health Consultant; Co-Director, UCL Online Master of Public Health; Director, UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Estimating the scale of hospital admissions for people experiencing homelessness
Dr Serena Luchenski, Clinical Associate Professor & Honorary Public Health Consultant; Co-Director, UCL Online Master of Public Health; Director, UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Measuring the unmet healthcare needs of refugees
Dr Rachel Burns, Senior Research Fellow, Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Prioritising equitable access to blood-borne virus treatment for inclusion health groups
Dr Binta Sultan, Inclusion Health Consultant and Clinical Research Fellow, Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Panel discussion/questions to include the above speakers plus:
Pete Bull and Manzoor Bhuiyan, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members
Q&A
16.45 – 17.30 AWARDS AND CELEBRATION
Chair’s introduction
Alex Bax, Chief Executive, Pathway and Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, Pathway
Award of Honorary Fellowships to the Faculty
Hosted by: Chris Sargeant and Leslie Murphy OBE
Stephanie O’Leary, Director, Healthy Living, Healthy Lives CIC
Tracy Pollard, our Advanced Clinical Practitioner, Inclusion Healthcare
Jane Cook, Complex Case Manager, Groundswell
Announcement of poster competition winners
Performance by the Sing for Freedom Choir
Close of Day 1 of the Symposium
08.30 – 09.30 BREAKFAST PECHA KUCHA PRESENTATIONS
Pecha Kucha Presentations
Chairs: Alex Bax, Chief Executive, Pathway and Dr Chris Sargeant, Pathway Medical Director; Secretary to the Faculty for Homeless & Inclusion Health
A sustainable dental service for people experiencing homelessness in Bristol, North Somerset & South Gloucestershire
Judy Caesley, Dental Hygienist, BrisDoc Homeless Health Service
The impact of shelter activities and social dynamics on substance use among people who use homelessness shelters
Sotiria Kyriakidou, PhD Candidate, University of Manchester
Embedding multiple disadvantage specialist practitioners in statutory services as a vehicle for system change and promoting multi-disciplinary working in Nottingham City
Amelia Draper, Evaluation Lead, Changing Futures Nottingham
Establishing a Student Inclusion Health Society focused on flourishing
Jeyapragash Jeyapala, Internal Medicine Trainee, North West and Central London NHS Trusts
Working together to reduce secondary care appointment DNAs
Wayne Henderson, Mental Health Nurse and Director of Nursing and Specialist Services at Inclusion Healthcare and Jigisha Patel, Service Manager, UHL
09.40 – 10.25 PLENARY SESSION THREE: PATHWAY’S ANNUAL REFLECTIONS AND LAUNCH OF THE 2025 BAROMETER REPORT
Chair’s opening remarks
Dee O’Connell, Director of Policy and Programmes, Pathway
Launch of 2025 Barometer Report and Policy Updates
Francesca Albanese, Executive Director of Policy & Social Change, Crisis and Theo Jackson, Research and Data Lead, Pathway
Dr Jenny Drife, Consultant Psychiatrist, START homeless outreach team
Dr Aaminah Verity, Senior Clinical Research Fellow, Queen Mary’s University of London
09.40 – 10.25 PLENARY SESSION FOUR: GETTING SUPPORT RIGHT: PERSPECTIVES FROM CANADA AND THE UK
Getting the support right in housing, a perspective from Canada
Steven Rolfe, Clinical Director, Indwell, Canada and Professor Abe Oudshoorn, Associate Professor and Acting Associate Dean Research (Faculty of Health Sciences), The Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, Western University; the Arthur Labatt Family Chair in Nursing Leadership in Health Equity, Canada
Diabetes and homelessness – what’s to be done?
Sam Dorney-Smith, Senior Nursing Fellow, Pathway; Clinical Research Lead, UCL and Lynne Wooff, Diabetes Specialist Nurse, NMP, Bolton NHS Foundation Trust/Integrated Services Division
Panel discussion/questions to include the above speakers plus:
Pete Bull and Gareth Murphy, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members
11.25 – 11.55 REFRESHMENT BREAK
11.55 – 13.25 CONCURRENT SESSIONS STREAM THREE
STREAM A3: PRIMARY CARE PERSPECTIVES
GP access for inclusion health groups: perspectives and recommendations
Dr Aaminah Verity, Senior Clinical Research Fellow, Queen Mary’s University of London
The STaR project – reaching out. An outreach, low threshold, multidisciplinary approach to substance use disorders and homelessness
Dr Sam Cole, GP Specialist Substance Misuse, Inclusion Health Devon – Clock Tower Surgery
Interventions to address missingness in primary care- what matters for inclusion health?
Andrea Williamson, Professor of General Practice & Inclusion Health, and Calum Lindsay, Research Associate, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow
STREAM B3: ASSESSING AND MEETING HIDDEN NEEDS
An investigation into the scale and impact of physical disability in people experiencing homelessness in Ireland
Julie Broderick, Head & Assistant Professor of Discipline of Physiotherapy, TCD and Dr Rikke Siersbaek, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Global Health, Trinity College Dublin
Prevalence of frailty in people experiencing homelessness: secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey
Joanna Dawes, Physiotherapist and NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow, UCL
Impact of the LEAP-W (Low-threshold Exercise and Protein supplementation programme-for Women) Trial
Fiona Kennedy, PhD Candidate, Trinity College, The University of Dublin, Ireland
STREAM C3: DIABETES AND HOMELESSNESS – FOLLOW UP AND DISCUSSION
Don’t tell us off: Examining ways to improve the health care of people experiencing homelessness with Diabetes
Maggie Kirk, Medical Director, Health bus
Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow Health
Rebekah Besford, Clinical Lead Nurse HHIT, Leeds Community Healthcare Trust
STREAM D3: DEVELOPMENTS FROM THE MENTAL HEALTH SUB-GROUP – DISCUSSION SESSION
As the network continues to expand, this is an opportunity to meet in-person to reflect on shared challenges and look to the future for the network. We hope to explore how we can continue to learn together as well as harness the expertise within the group to make systemic change.
STREAM E3: IMPROVING NUTRITION IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Nutritional support project for people experiencing homelessness and drugs and alcohol misuse
Neal McArdle, Head of Learning & Training Services, Providence Row
Work of the Pathway Nutrition Committee
Ghislaine Swinburn, Research Dietitian; Pathway Fellow
12:55 – 14:00 LUNCH BREAK
13:25 – 13:55 LUNCH AND LEARN
13:15 – 13:45 LUNCH AND LEARN
Pecha Kucha Presentations
Interventions to improve inclusion health groups’ access to primary care in England
Dr Elspeth Carruthers, IMT2 Doctor, Whittington Health NHS Trust
How homeless hostel staff conceptualise their work
Mandeep Kallu, Clinical Psychologist and Research Associate NIHR Health Inclusion Pathway Plymouth
HHIT or miss? Integrated working – Andy’s story
Rebekah Besford, Clinical Lead Nurse HHIT, Paramedic Street Outreach, LCH, Bevan
Discussion Group: Under-represented AHPs in inclusion health
Led by Ghislaine Swinburn, Research Dietitian; Pathway Fellow
With contributions from:
Jo Dawes, Physiotherapist
Judy Caseley, Dental Hygienist
Jimmy Frankland, Homeless Outreach Paramedic – Bevan Healthcare CIC
14.00 – 15.00 CONCURRENT SESSIONS STREAM FOUR
STREAM A4: DEMONSTRATING NEED AND COMMISSIONING
Shifting the power
Lisa Byrne, Changing Futures Programme Lead – Multiple Disadvantage and Jamie Poole, Lived Experience Project Manager, Surrey County Council
A partnership approach to improving access to healthcare for people who experience multiple disadvantage shaped by the voice of lived experience
Dr Andrew Foster, Deputy Clinical Director, Nottingham City Place Based Partnership, Nottingham City General Practice Alliance
Break the cycle: understanding multiple unmet needs in Hull
Dr Alexandra MacNamara, Public Health Registrar, Hull City Council and Amanda Hailes, Co-founder, An Untold Story – Voices
Our approach to inclusion health through Primary Care in Wales – The national programme
Dr Kerry Bailey, Consultant in Public Health, Primary Care Transformation, Public Health Wales
STREAM B4: RACISM, STIGMA AND DISCRIMINATION
The differing experiences of epilepsy-related quality of life and stigma in people with epilepsy who are housed or experiencing homelessness: a mixed-methods study
Dr Ciara Anderson, Doctor (SHO), St James Hospital, Dublin and Dr Hannah Lucey, Psychiatry Registrar, Dublin Hospital
Trauma during homelessness and how it shapes mental health (substance use): results from seaside towns and an urban setting in North East England using narrative illustrations
Emma Adams, NIHR Doctoral Fellow, Newcastle University, Haley Paxton and Jamesy Dillon, Experts by Experience
STREAM C4: MAINSTREAMING ADDICTION TREATMENT
Providing continuity and equivalence of care to imprisoned women with opiate addiction
Dr Emma Mastrocola, Lead GP, HMP Eastwood Park
Substance use services – everyone’s business
Ben Jameson, Clinical Lead, Health Inclusion Pathway, Plymouth; Adelaide St Surgery/HIPP
Utilising delivery of OST to improve treatment outcomes for people in hostel accommodation
Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow Health
STREAM D4: LEADING THE WAY ON CO-PRODUCTION
How to train GPs to work in areas of deprivation
Dr Laura Neilson, Shared Health Foundation
From major trauma to trauma informed – educating student paramedics in homeless and inclusion health to improve the patient experience and health
Dominic Maddocks, Inclusion Health Paramedic, Bevan Health CIC
Co-producing healthcare professional teaching with people who have experienced homelessness. Reflections on a teaching collaboration in Brighton
Dr Kate Pitt, GP and Lecturer in Medical Education, Brighton and Hove Common Ambition, Justlife, Arch, Brighton and Sussex Medical School and Sara Emerson, Health Engagement Team Leader, Justlife
15.00 – 15.20 REFRESHMENT BREAK
15.20 – 16.45 PLENARY SESSION FIVE: A MAINSTREAM FUTURE FOR INCLUSION HEALTH
Chair’s opening remarks
Dr Chris Sargeant
From the margins to the mainstream – reflections on 10 years as Chair of Pathway
Leslie Morphy OBE, Chair, Pathway
Hostile to health, UK immigration policy and the health, wellbeing and service use of migrants
Professor Beth Watts-Cobbe, Professor, Heriot-Watt University and Annika Joy, Programme Director for Ending Destitution, Simon Community Scotland
Close of Day 2 of the Symposium
- Day 1 - 12/03/2025
-
10.00 – 11.15 PLENARY SESSION ONE
WHY ARE WE HERE?
Chair’s opening remarks
Alex Bax, Chief Executive and Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, PathwayA patient we cannot forget
Elizabeth Keat, Homeless Integration Lead, Leeds Community HealthcareKeynote Address: How should we respond to violence?
Professor Martin Griffiths CBE, Clinical Director, Violence Reduction, NHS LondonWomen’s experiences of severe and multiple disadvantage: a call to action
Professor Sarah Johnsen, Chair in Homelessness and Inclusion Health, University of EdinburghPanel discussion and Q&A
Above speakers plus Gareth Davis and Ross Mayo, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members
11.15 – 11.45 REFRESHMENT BREAK
11.45 – 13.15 BREAKOUT SESSIONS STREAM 1
STREAM A1: WOMEN AND FAMILIES IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Women’s experiences of homelessness in high income contexts: Evidence from a meta-ethnographic systematic review
Maxine Radcliffe, Service Director, Health Service ExecutiveReducing health inequalities for families experiencing homelessness
Angie Ouattara, Maternal Health Lead, Shared Health FoundationExploring Maternity Experiences and Perinatal Mortality in the Gypsy Traveller Community: Insights from Art Based Research Project
Barbara Czyznikowska, Community Engagement and Inclusion Manager, Centre for Ethnic Health Research, University of Leicester and Elisabeth Naylor, Artist and Sculptor“The best decision I’ve made in years!” Putting women experiencing homelessness at the heart of a women’s health hub
Liz Thomas, Homeless Health Nurse, Urban Village Medical PracticeSTREAM B1: LEARNING FROM AROUND THE GLOBE
The Better Health and Housing Program
Claire Doherty, Senior Research and Evaluation Officer, St Vincent’s Hospital MelbournePreventing and reducing homelessness among people with acquired brain injury: a first step in the search for solutions
William Jubinville, Occupational Therapist and PhD Student, Université de MontréalEricare pathways to stability: from lived experience to youth homelessness solutions
Erica Moseley, Homeless Problem Solver/ Community DeveloperBurden of disease of the people experiencing homelessness in Chile
Miguel Harfagar, Director, Fundación Salud Calle, Santiago, ChileSTREAM C1: SPECIALIST PSYCHOLOGY IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Learning from the co-designed HOME (Homeless, older and experiencing memory problems) intervention
Dr Penny Rapaport, Principal Research Fellow and Honorary Clinical Psychologist, Division of Psychiatry, University College London and Charlie Beeson, Research Assistant, University College LondonUnderstanding healthcare exclusion: a meta-ethnography of homeless individuals’ healthcare experiences
Elizabeth Scott, Trainee Clinical Psychologist and Teaching Fellow, OutcomeHome and University of SouthamptonSafe space psychotherapy – a new approach to gender and trauma informed talking therapy
Kate John, Women’s Recovery Co-ordinator, St Mungo’sCentring lived experience voices and experiential expertise in the evaluation of the psychology offer in Crisis’ homelessness services
Raj Hazzard, Senior Researcher, McPin Foundation; Andrew Ashley, Nicholas Couchman and Thomas Inman, Experience Co Researchers, CrisisSTREAM D1: CO-PRODUCED PODCAST: JOURNEYS IN DUAL DIAGNOSIS AND HOMELESSNESS
The podcast explores personal journeys from a non-medical and medical lived experience perspective, in the hope of encouraging conversations around these issues, aiming for better outcomes for everyone affected.
Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, Pathway, Mark Banyan and Ross Mayo, Pathway Lived Experience Group MembersSTREAM E1: EXTENSIVE CARE: COULD INTEGRATED COMMUNITY TEAMS PROMOTE INCLUSION HEALTH?
Extensive care: could integrated community teams promote inclusion health?
Neil Singh, Senior General Practice Teaching Fellow, University of Brighton
12.45 – 14.00 LUNCH BREAK
13.15 – 13.45 LUNCH AND LEARN
13.00 – 13.20 LUNCH AND LEARN
Tackling homelessness – a perspective from California
Professor Margot Kushel, Professor of Medicine and Division Chief at Division of Health Equity and Society, Zuckerberg San Franscisco General Hospital
(Video presentation and Q&A)The best for baby film (20 min video)
Introduced by Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow HealthThe Best for Baby Revolution film tells the story of having a baby while in the UK asylum system. The film has been written by and stars, Creative Influencers, a group of mothers with lived experience of having a baby whilst seeking asylum. The film has been made as part of a training resource for midwives, with the hope it can inform training and policy on a wider scale. It is an important and hard-hitting piece, informed by personal narrative as well as national research and policy, while also managing to inspire and promote a message of hope.
14.00 – 15.00 BREAKOUT SESSIONS STREAM 2
STREAM A2: BRINGING DATA INTO THE MAINSTREAM
Deaths of people experiencing homelessness: A mixed-methods analysis of death reviews in Oxfordshire 2018-2023
Dr Riley Botelle, Resident Doctor, Wexham Park Hospital, Frimley Health NHS Foundation TrustMASST – Multi Agency Safeguarding and Support Team
Kerry Gilbert, Matron, Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS TrustInception of an inclusion health service at Tallaght University Hospital, Dublin – a needs analysis
Dr Kaitlyn O’Brien, Medical Senior House Officer, Tallaght University Hospital Dublin, IrelandSTREAM B2: IMPROVING PRACTICE
It’s OK to ask sensitive questions but….
Dr Amy Stevens, Public Health Lead, Bevan CICWorking together to remove barriers
Dr Fiona Meth, Director of Practice, School of Healthcare, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of LeedsBridging gaps: co-producing service change in primary care for and with people with severe and multiple disadvantage
Dr Lucy Potter, GP Academic, Bristol UniversitySTREAM C2: MAINSTREAMING SPECIALIST WORKING
Introducing a working model and then bringing it to life
Anthony Pickup, Involvement and Inclusion Manager, MEAMHow can we best support peer workers to enable them to support those experiencing homelessness and problem substance use? Insights from the SHARPS study
Dr Jen Boyd, Research Fellow, University of StirlingSTREAM D2: DELIVERING HOUSING AND ENDING HOMELESSNESS
How do we join ambitions around delivering housing and ending homelessness? The role of inclusion health
Sarah Finnegan, Head of Policy, National Housing Federation
Jasmine Basran, Head of Policy and Campaigns), Crisis15.00 – 15.30 REFRESHMENT BREAK
15.30 – 17.00 PLENARY SESSION TWO
MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE: NEW NATIONAL RESEARCH ON INEQUITIES IN HEALTHCARE ACCESS ACROSS ENGLAND
Chair’s introduction
Jo Dawes, NIHR Doctoral Research FellowIntroduction to the UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion Health
Dr Serena Luchenski, Clinical Associate Professor & Honorary Public Health Consultant; Co-Director, UCL Online Master of Public Health; Director, UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion HealthEstimating the scale of hospital admissions for people experiencing homelessness
Dr Serena Luchenski, Clinical Associate Professor & Honorary Public Health Consultant; Co-Director, UCL Online Master of Public Health; Director, UCL Collaborative Centre for Inclusion HealthMeasuring the unmet healthcare needs of refugees
Dr Rachel Burns, Senior Research Fellow, Collaborative Centre for Inclusion HealthPrioritising equitable access to blood-borne virus treatment for inclusion health groups
Dr Binta Sultan, Inclusion Health Consultant and Clinical Research Fellow, Collaborative Centre for Inclusion HealthPanel discussion/questions to include the above speakers plus:
Pete Bull and Manzoor Bhuiyan, Pathway Lived Experience Group MembersQ&A
16.45 – 17.30 AWARDS AND CELEBRATION
Chair’s introduction
Alex Bax, Chief Executive, Pathway and Mandy Pattinson, Lived Experience Programme Manager, PathwayAward of Honorary Fellowships to the Faculty
Hosted by: Chris Sargeant and Leslie Murphy OBE
Stephanie O’Leary, Director, Healthy Living, Healthy Lives CIC
Tracy Pollard, our Advanced Clinical Practitioner, Inclusion Healthcare
Jane Cook, Complex Case Manager, GroundswellAnnouncement of poster competition winners
Performance by the Sing for Freedom Choir
Close of Day 1 of the Symposium
- Day 2 - 13/03/2025
-
08.30 – 09.30 BREAKFAST PECHA KUCHA PRESENTATIONS
Pecha Kucha Presentations
Chairs: Alex Bax, Chief Executive, Pathway and Dr Chris Sargeant, Pathway Medical Director; Secretary to the Faculty for Homeless & Inclusion Health
A sustainable dental service for people experiencing homelessness in Bristol, North Somerset & South Gloucestershire
Judy Caesley, Dental Hygienist, BrisDoc Homeless Health ServiceThe impact of shelter activities and social dynamics on substance use among people who use homelessness shelters
Sotiria Kyriakidou, PhD Candidate, University of ManchesterEmbedding multiple disadvantage specialist practitioners in statutory services as a vehicle for system change and promoting multi-disciplinary working in Nottingham City
Amelia Draper, Evaluation Lead, Changing Futures NottinghamEstablishing a Student Inclusion Health Society focused on flourishing
Jeyapragash Jeyapala, Internal Medicine Trainee, North West and Central London NHS TrustsWorking together to reduce secondary care appointment DNAs
Wayne Henderson, Mental Health Nurse and Director of Nursing and Specialist Services at Inclusion Healthcare and Jigisha Patel, Service Manager, UHL09.40 – 10.25 PLENARY SESSION THREE: PATHWAY’S ANNUAL REFLECTIONS AND LAUNCH OF THE 2025 BAROMETER REPORT
Chair’s opening remarks
Dee O’Connell, Director of Policy and Programmes, PathwayLaunch of 2025 Barometer Report and Policy Updates
Francesca Albanese, Executive Director of Policy & Social Change, Crisis and Theo Jackson, Research and Data Lead, Pathway
Dr Jenny Drife, Consultant Psychiatrist, START homeless outreach team
Dr Aaminah Verity, Senior Clinical Research Fellow, Queen Mary’s University of London
09.40 – 10.25 PLENARY SESSION FOUR: GETTING SUPPORT RIGHT: PERSPECTIVES FROM CANADA AND THE UK
Getting the support right in housing, a perspective from Canada
Steven Rolfe, Clinical Director, Indwell, Canada and Professor Abe Oudshoorn, Associate Professor and Acting Associate Dean Research (Faculty of Health Sciences), The Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, Western University; the Arthur Labatt Family Chair in Nursing Leadership in Health Equity, CanadaDiabetes and homelessness – what’s to be done?
Sam Dorney-Smith, Senior Nursing Fellow, Pathway; Clinical Research Lead, UCL and Lynne Wooff, Diabetes Specialist Nurse, NMP, Bolton NHS Foundation Trust/Integrated Services DivisionPanel discussion/questions to include the above speakers plus:
Pete Bull and Gareth Murphy, Pathway Lived Experience Group Members11.25 – 11.55 REFRESHMENT BREAK
11.55 – 13.25 CONCURRENT SESSIONS STREAM THREE
STREAM A3: PRIMARY CARE PERSPECTIVES
GP access for inclusion health groups: perspectives and recommendations
Dr Aaminah Verity, Senior Clinical Research Fellow, Queen Mary’s University of LondonThe STaR project – reaching out. An outreach, low threshold, multidisciplinary approach to substance use disorders and homelessness
Dr Sam Cole, GP Specialist Substance Misuse, Inclusion Health Devon – Clock Tower SurgeryInterventions to address missingness in primary care- what matters for inclusion health?
Andrea Williamson, Professor of General Practice & Inclusion Health, and Calum Lindsay, Research Associate, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of GlasgowSTREAM B3: ASSESSING AND MEETING HIDDEN NEEDS
An investigation into the scale and impact of physical disability in people experiencing homelessness in Ireland
Julie Broderick, Head & Assistant Professor of Discipline of Physiotherapy, TCD and Dr Rikke Siersbaek, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Centre for Global Health, Trinity College DublinPrevalence of frailty in people experiencing homelessness: secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey
Joanna Dawes, Physiotherapist and NIHR Doctoral Research Fellow, UCLImpact of the LEAP-W (Low-threshold Exercise and Protein supplementation programme-for Women) Trial
Fiona Kennedy, PhD Candidate, Trinity College, The University of Dublin, IrelandSTREAM C3: DIABETES AND HOMELESSNESS – FOLLOW UP AND DISCUSSION
Don’t tell us off: Examining ways to improve the health care of people experiencing homelessness with Diabetes
Maggie Kirk, Medical Director, Health bus
Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow Health
Rebekah Besford, Clinical Lead Nurse HHIT, Leeds Community Healthcare TrustSTREAM D3: DEVELOPMENTS FROM THE MENTAL HEALTH SUB-GROUP – DISCUSSION SESSION
As the network continues to expand, this is an opportunity to meet in-person to reflect on shared challenges and look to the future for the network. We hope to explore how we can continue to learn together as well as harness the expertise within the group to make systemic change.
STREAM E3: IMPROVING NUTRITION IN INCLUSION HEALTH
Nutritional support project for people experiencing homelessness and drugs and alcohol misuse
Neal McArdle, Head of Learning & Training Services, Providence RowWork of the Pathway Nutrition Committee
Ghislaine Swinburn, Research Dietitian; Pathway Fellow12:55 – 14:00 LUNCH BREAK
13:25 – 13:55 LUNCH AND LEARN
13:15 – 13:45 LUNCH AND LEARN
Pecha Kucha Presentations
Interventions to improve inclusion health groups’ access to primary care in England
Dr Elspeth Carruthers, IMT2 Doctor, Whittington Health NHS TrustHow homeless hostel staff conceptualise their work
Mandeep Kallu, Clinical Psychologist and Research Associate NIHR Health Inclusion Pathway PlymouthHHIT or miss? Integrated working – Andy’s story
Rebekah Besford, Clinical Lead Nurse HHIT, Paramedic Street Outreach, LCH, BevanDiscussion Group: Under-represented AHPs in inclusion health
Led by Ghislaine Swinburn, Research Dietitian; Pathway Fellow
With contributions from:
Jo Dawes, Physiotherapist
Judy Caseley, Dental Hygienist
Jimmy Frankland, Homeless Outreach Paramedic – Bevan Healthcare CIC14.00 – 15.00 CONCURRENT SESSIONS STREAM FOUR
STREAM A4: DEMONSTRATING NEED AND COMMISSIONING
Shifting the power
Lisa Byrne, Changing Futures Programme Lead – Multiple Disadvantage and Jamie Poole, Lived Experience Project Manager, Surrey County CouncilA partnership approach to improving access to healthcare for people who experience multiple disadvantage shaped by the voice of lived experience
Dr Andrew Foster, Deputy Clinical Director, Nottingham City Place Based Partnership, Nottingham City General Practice AllianceBreak the cycle: understanding multiple unmet needs in Hull
Dr Alexandra MacNamara, Public Health Registrar, Hull City Council and Amanda Hailes, Co-founder, An Untold Story – VoicesOur approach to inclusion health through Primary Care in Wales – The national programme
Dr Kerry Bailey, Consultant in Public Health, Primary Care Transformation, Public Health WalesSTREAM B4: RACISM, STIGMA AND DISCRIMINATION
The differing experiences of epilepsy-related quality of life and stigma in people with epilepsy who are housed or experiencing homelessness: a mixed-methods study
Dr Ciara Anderson, Doctor (SHO), St James Hospital, Dublin and Dr Hannah Lucey, Psychiatry Registrar, Dublin HospitalTrauma during homelessness and how it shapes mental health (substance use): results from seaside towns and an urban setting in North East England using narrative illustrations
Emma Adams, NIHR Doctoral Fellow, Newcastle University, Haley Paxton and Jamesy Dillon, Experts by ExperienceSTREAM C4: MAINSTREAMING ADDICTION TREATMENT
Providing continuity and equivalence of care to imprisoned women with opiate addiction
Dr Emma Mastrocola, Lead GP, HMP Eastwood ParkSubstance use services – everyone’s business
Ben Jameson, Clinical Lead, Health Inclusion Pathway, Plymouth; Adelaide St Surgery/HIPPUtilising delivery of OST to improve treatment outcomes for people in hostel accommodation
Dr Ryan Young, GP in Inclusion Health, Brownlow HealthSTREAM D4: LEADING THE WAY ON CO-PRODUCTION
How to train GPs to work in areas of deprivation
Dr Laura Neilson, Shared Health FoundationFrom major trauma to trauma informed – educating student paramedics in homeless and inclusion health to improve the patient experience and health
Dominic Maddocks, Inclusion Health Paramedic, Bevan Health CICCo-producing healthcare professional teaching with people who have experienced homelessness. Reflections on a teaching collaboration in Brighton
Dr Kate Pitt, GP and Lecturer in Medical Education, Brighton and Hove Common Ambition, Justlife, Arch, Brighton and Sussex Medical School and Sara Emerson, Health Engagement Team Leader, Justlife15.00 – 15.20 REFRESHMENT BREAK
15.20 – 16.45 PLENARY SESSION FIVE: A MAINSTREAM FUTURE FOR INCLUSION HEALTH
Chair’s opening remarks
Dr Chris SargeantFrom the margins to the mainstream – reflections on 10 years as Chair of Pathway
Leslie Morphy OBE, Chair, PathwayHostile to health, UK immigration policy and the health, wellbeing and service use of migrants
Professor Beth Watts-Cobbe, Professor, Heriot-Watt University and Annika Joy, Programme Director for Ending Destitution, Simon Community ScotlandClose of Day 2 of the Symposium
RESOURCES
Delegate resources including the delegate list, agenda and speaker presentation slides are available to download here.
EVALUATION
Please complete the attendee evaluation form below to give us your feedback on this year’s symposium.
Pathways from Homelessness 2025 - Evaluation Form
TECH SUPPORT

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