Homeless / housing-vulnerable mental health — 14,000 Korean homeless, 30% mental illness, the Finnish "Housing First" model, Seoul Dasi-Seogi Comprehensive Support Center

Homeless / housing-vulnerable mental health — 14,000 Korean homeless, 30% mental illness, the Finnish "Housing First" model, Seoul Dasi-Seogi Comprehensive Support Center

Korea has about 14,000 homeless (MOHW 2021): 2,400 street, 11,600 in shelters. Including "broader housing-vulnerable" (jjokbang, goshiwon, jjimjilbang, vehicle living), estimated 270,000. Key clinical facts: 30% of homeless have mental illness, 25% alcohol use disorder, 15% both ("dual diagnosis"); average life expectancy 17 years shorter. The Korean cliche is wrong: more often "mental illness / addiction / trauma → homelessness" than "homelessness → mental illness". Finland's Housing First model (since 2008) — unconditional housing first, then treatment — cut homelessness 50% over 10 years. Korea's "treatment then housing" model has entry conditions (sobriety, controlled mental illness) that exclude the people who most need it. 5-stage recovery system: ① safe housing ② mental-health / addiction evaluation ③ physical medicine ④ work / income rebuilding ⑤ social linking. Korean resources: Seoul Dasi-Seogi, Homeless Comprehensive Support Centers, 1366, 129.

TL;DR

Korea homeless 14K, broader vulnerable 270K. Mental illness 30%, addiction 25%, 17 fewer years of life. "Mental illness → homelessness" causality dominates. Finland's Housing First (unconditional housing → 50% reduction). Korea's treatment-first conditions exclude those who need it most. 5 steps: housing, mental/addiction, medicine, work, linking. Resources: Dasi-Seogi, 129.

1. The scale of Korean homelessness / housing vulnerability

CategoryNumber
Street homeless~2,400
Shelter homeless (self-reliance / temporary protection)~11,600
Jjokbang residents~6,000
Goshiwon / inns / jjimjilbang / PC rooms~230,000
Non-housing (containers, vehicles, etc.)~30,000
Total housing-vulnerable estimate~270,000

(MOHW Homeless Survey 2021; Ministry of Land Housing Survey 2022)

2. Clinical facts

  • 30% comorbid mental illness (schizophrenia, depression, bipolar, PTSD)
  • 25% alcohol use disorder
  • 15% dual diagnosis (mental illness + addiction)
  • 60%+ chronic physical illness (diabetes, hypertension, hepatitis, TB)
  • 17 fewer years of average life expectancy (US data; Korea estimated similar)
  • Suicide rate 8× the general population
  • Average age at homelessness entry: 50s; average duration 6.5 years

3. "Does mental illness cause homelessness, or homelessness cause mental illness?"

Long-running debate. Longitudinal studies (Susser 1991, Folsom 2005) answer:

  • 60–70% of those entering homelessness already had mental illness / addiction / trauma
  • 30–40% develop mental illness after entry (cumulative trauma)
  • That is, the causation is bidirectional, with the majority "mental illness → homelessness"

Policy implication: "treating homeless people alone is not enough" — entry prevention (early mental illness / addiction treatment) plus post-entry integrated care is needed.

4. The Finnish "Housing First" revolution

Since 2008, Finland's Y-Foundation led the shift to Housing First:

Principles

  1. Unconditional housing: no need to control drinking, drugs, or mental illness — provide permanent housing immediately
  2. Housing + treatment: begin treatment inside the housing
  3. Recovery vs treatment-first: "recovery is possible" paradigm
  4. Dispersed housing: distributed in regular neighborhoods, avoiding "homeless slums"

10-year results

  • Long-term homelessness down 50% (17,000 in 2008 → 5,500 in 2018)
  • Cost: €15,000 saved per homeless person/year (lower ER and police costs offset housing costs)
  • Housing retention 80%+ (proving recovery is possible)

Many OECD countries (Canada, US LA, France, parts of Japan) have adopted.

5. Limits of the Korean model

Current system

  1. Emergency: temporary protection (3–7 days)
  2. Self-reliance: self-reliance facility (3 months–5 years) — conditions: "no alcohol, follow rules"
  3. Permanent rental: after "graduating", apply for LH / SH rental housing

Limits

  • Drinkers / those with mental illness are excluded from self-reliance facilities → cycling through street / shelters
  • Housing → recovery vs recovery → housing ordering problem
  • 3–7 days of temporary protection then discharge — back to street
  • Complex medical / legal procedures for severe mental illness

6. Ideal 5-stage recovery system

Stage 1: safe housing

  • Emergency temporary protection (1 week – 1 month)
  • Self-reliance facility or purchase-rental (LH / SH)
  • Housing First pilots — some in Seoul since 2018

Stage 2: mental-health / addiction evaluation

  • National Center for Mental Health homeless care
  • Local mental-health welfare centers
  • Alcohol counseling 1899-7124, AA

Stage 3: physical medicine

  • Register for Medical Care types 1 / 2
  • Integrated screening for TB, hepatitis, diabetes, dental
  • Homeless medical facilities, public hospitals

Stage 4: work / income rebuilding

  • Apply for National Basic Livelihood (~710,000 KRW/month)
  • Self-reliance work / public jobs
  • Vocational training (HRD-Net)
  • Credit Counseling and Recovery Service (debt restructuring)

Stage 5: social linking

  • Reconnect with family / relatives (if possible)
  • Peer-support groups (formerly homeless)
  • Religious communities, volunteering
  • Ongoing case management

7. Korean resources

  • Seoul Dasi-Seogi Comprehensive Support Center: integrated homeless support, 02-2271-2710
  • Nationwide Homeless Comprehensive Support Centers: by city / province
  • 129: Health & Welfare Call Center (emergency housing / welfare)
  • 1577-1389: homeless crisis (MOHW)
  • 1577-0199: suicide crisis
  • 1899-7124: alcohol counseling
  • 112: winter emergency (hypothermia, freezing death risk)
  • Community centers: basic livelihood / medical-care applications

8. What citizens can do

  • Don't look away from street homeless — report to Dasi-Seogi, 129, or 112 (winter)
  • Winter (Dec–Feb) freezing-death risk — call 112 immediately
  • Refuse prejudice / discriminatory remarks
  • Support related organizations, volunteer
  • Bust the "homelessness = laziness" myth — 70% have mental illness / trauma background

9. When family is at risk of homelessness

  • Even if they refuse, maintain regular contact
  • Prevent residence-registration cancellation (re-entry is hard)
  • Accompany medical care / basic-livelihood applications
  • Involuntary admission (with mental illness) under Mental Health Welfare Act §43-44
  • Take care of your own mental health (burden, guilt)
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Frequently asked questions

Does giving money to homeless people help?

Short-term no, and long-term can deepen dependence. More effective: 1) report location to Dasi-Seogi / 129, 2) food, warm drinks (not cash), 3) call 112 immediately in winter, 4) support related organizations, volunteer. "Indifference" is the greatest harm. Awareness and concern itself is where recovery starts.

Are jjokbang and goshiwon also "homelessness"?

Not in the legal "homelessness" definition, but included in UN / WHO "housing insecurity". Tiny rooms (2–5 m²), shared toilets, no cooking, no tenancy rights (monthly rent burden), 3× general mental-health risk. 230,000 in Korean "non-housing dwelling" data.

Is Housing First being introduced in Korea?

Partially. Seoul's 2018 "Homeless Housing Support Project" adopted parts of the Finnish model — purchase-rental combined with case management. But not nationwide; budget limited. Civil society (Korea Center for City and Environment Research, etc.) advocates expansion. Legislation is being attempted.

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