https://www.selleckchem.com/products/pim447-lgh447.html People experiencing homelessness have worse health outcomes than the general population and limited access to primary/preventative healthcare. This leads to high hospital readmission rates. Effective discharge planning can improve recovery rates and reduce hospital costs. However, most hospital discharge policies and best practice guidelines are not tailored to patients with no fixed address, contributing to inappropriate discharges and health inequities for people experiencing homelessness. We discuss the lack of discharge policies, identifiable processes or plans specifically tailored to this population as a healthcare and policy gap, and we identify key areas for better understanding and addressing this issue.Each of canada's provinces and territories needs to modernize its basket of insured health services to reflect a broader conceptualization of healthcare. The narrow focus on hospital and physician services excludes multidisciplinary care models, such as those reflected by Family Health Teams in Ontario, Groupe de médecine de famille in Québec and primary care networks in Alberta. In these models, a wider range of services and supports is being used to respond to changing demographics and patterns of morbidity, and whose residents' care needs include social workers, mental health providers, personal support workers and dietitians.The association between suicide risk and sexual minority status can be understood from the perspective of the social determinants of health, an approach that requires the development of culturally sensitive knowledge. The aim of this study was to characterize young gay and lesbian people's subjective construction of their experience of having lived and survived a suicidal process. Qualitative interviews were conducted and analyzed as products based on life events. In the participants' accounts, we identified hostile contexts associated with suicide, trajectories associated with