- 69% of homeless citizens said they had been in a car accident
- 77% asserted they had fallen off a roof or out of a tree, etc.
- 74% reported they had been mugged
- 75% declared they had been beaten up or hit very hard in the head
- 80% said they had been hit hard enough to "see stars" or get their "bell rung" leaving them dazed and confused with headaches and general irritability
Survey Links Brain Injury to Medical Causes of Homelessness - Follow Up
By Anthony Jude TanJune 10, 2025

Apr 12, 2016
AUSTIN, Texas, April 12, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- This is powerful evidence ( goo.gl/oKwlmJ ) that many of the 26 symptoms that point to traumatic brain injuries, TBI, are prevalent among people experiencing homelessness. The overlapping between veterans experiencing TBI and the homeless people experiencing homelessness, is already significant with 33% of people experiencing homelessness estimated to be actual Veterans. Furthermore, with 68% of interviewees strictly being homeless and reporting having played contact sports etc., the over-arching take away is that our nation as a whole, is experiencing concussions that result in people falling through all of our safety nets and into the condition of homelessness.
Now Dr. Mark L. Gordon, an endocrinologist with 11 years of experience in the area of Traumatic Brain Injury with Millennium Heath Centers, and several other doctors, focusing on hormone replacement therapy, has linked with Andrew Marr and the Warrior Angles Foundation, www.waftbi.org to successfully treat over 100 Veterans suffering from Traumatic Brain Injuries.



