%0 Journal Article %T Recommendations for improving the end-of-life care system for homeless populations: A qualitative study of the views of Canadian health and social services professionals %A Ryan McNeil %A Manal Guirguis-Younger %A Laura B Dilley %J BMC Palliative Care %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1472-684x-11-14 %X Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 54 health and social services professionals involved in end-of-life care services delivery to homeless persons in six Canadian cities (Halifax, Hamilton, Ottawa, Thunder Bay, Toronto and Winnipeg). Participants included health administrators, physicians, nurses, social workers, harm reduction specialists, and outreach workers. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed thematically.Participants identified key barriers to end-of-life care services for homeless persons, including: (1) insufficient availability of end-of-life care services; (2) exclusionary operating procedures; and, (3) poor continuity of care. Participants identified recommendations that they felt had the potential to minimize these barriers, including: (1) adopting low-threshold strategies (e.g. flexible behavioural policies and harm reduction strategies); (2) linking with population-specific health and social care providers (e.g. emergency shelters); and, (3) strengthening population-specific training.Homeless persons may be underserved by the end-of-life care system as a result of barriers that they face to accessing end-of-life care services. Changes in the rules and regulations that reflect the health needs and circumstances of homeless persons and measures to improve continuity of care have the potential to increase equity in the end-of-life care system for this underserved population.Tens of thousands of people in North America experience homelessness every year [1,2]¡ªthat is, live in conditions unfit for human habitation or temporary or emergency accommodations without housing alternatives [3]¡ªand many thousands more are at risk of homelessness at any given time [1,2]. Homeless populations in North America, while highly heterogeneous in terms of age, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity, suffer disproportionately from poor health in comparison to housed populations [4]. Chronic health conditions that are common amon %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-684X/11/14