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SLOVAKIA/SLOVENIA – “Bridges of Change”- Hope for the Homeless

SLOVAKIA/SLOVENIA – “Bridges of Change”- Hope for the Homeless

The project aims to contribute to improving the health and social situation of 1,880 homeless people in the capital of Slovakia, Bratislava, and the capital of Slovenia, Ljubijana, in harmony with local intervention strategies and in accordance with SDGs n.1, 3 and 11. The main target group to which the project is addressed presents inter-related difficulties of a health nature (difficulty in accessing medical care, exposure to risks related to the life context, psychological difficulties) and of a social nature (deficiencies in the field of prevention of marginality, lack of support in situations of social and housing emergency). The project presented, developed in collaboration with the Municipality of Bratislava, the Municipality of Ljubljana and the Ministry of Health of Slovenia, is part of a multi-year intervention strategy of Doctors for Peace in the country and aims to progressively strengthen the tools already activated on site by the local partner, OZ Vagus and Kralji Ulice, completing them with qualified services and consolidating its ability to respond effectively and decisively to situations of hardship.

The context

The proposed intervention is taking place in parallel in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, and Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia (Central and Eastern Europe). Although with socio-demographic and economic differences, the two countries in which the interventions are carried out have characteristics that unite them from the point of view of the needs of the target populations to which the initiative is addressed.

From an economic point of view, the Bratislava region is the most developed region in Slovakia, with more than 75% of the inhabitants employed in services (trade, banking, information technology, telecommunications and tourism). However, as happens in the most urbanized areas, the capital is also a place of aggregation of people in conditions of serious marginality. Although the last official count, dating back to 2016, indicated the presence of 2,064 homeless people in the city, pre-pandemic estimates on the real number of homeless people assume a total of over 4,000 people, which has probably grown further as a result of the current social and health crisis: it is therefore assumed that about one in 100 people in Bratislava is homeless. Of these, 10% are minors, 36% are female and, according to a conservative estimate, more than 20% are affected by psychiatric disorders.

In Slovenia, a study by the Ministry of Labour, Family and Social Affairs found that in 2010 there was a homeless population of between 1,000 and 1,500 people in the country, of which 600 were in the capital (Siol.net, 2012). However, the local partner, Kralji Ulice, has counted over 700 homeless people who accessed services in the first six months of 2023, with a conservative forecast of about 900-1000 total people reached by the end of the year: in 66% of cases these are men with an average age of 43. Minors and women (about 33%) are also among the beneficiaries with peculiar problems often linked to situations of family abuse.

Activities

In particular, the intervention makes it possible to:

  1. guarantee the homeless population of the cities of Bratislava and Ljubljana access to quality health services, adequate health care and, if necessary, psychological support pathways;
  2. offer the homeless population tools to improve their social, economic and administrative condition and guarantee immediate support in the event of a housing emergency;
  3. contribute to improving the intervention capacities of local partners in the health and social fields for a progressive sustainability of actions in favor of the disadvantaged population.
  4. exchange of good practices between Italy, Slovakia and Slovenia in the management of services offered to the homeless population both in the social and health fields.

Ambito

Paese

Beneficiari

Durata

Sostenitori

Partner