Santé mentale et sans-abrisme :
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de psychologue de terrain

« Un pas, un toit »,
le défi solidaire de Julien
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Together, let's end homelessness !

At Street nurses, as a medico-social organization, we are convinced that the end of homelessness in Brussels, Liège and elsewhere is possible.

Since 2005 in Brussels, and 2019 in Liège, we have been contributing to this by providing sustainable housing for the most vulnerable homeless people in terms of health.

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[Together,] let's end homelessness ! [Together,] let's end homelessness !

Street Nurses, it's...

232 rehoused people
176 followed people in 2025
17122 cases of care, counseling, transfers, and support in 2025

A few stories

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When the psychiatric care pathway weakens the bond: supporting beyond ruptures

Mr T., now in his fifties, was referred to us in 2019 by the CPAS, following a period of street homelessness and a psychiatric hospitalization. He had just moved into housing and was already receiving support from a mobile mental health team. The aim of the support was to consolidate his housing stability, while integrating it into a global and coordinated care approach.

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Local network and in-home support (Housing First) essential support to remain in housing

Gaining access to housing after a long period of homelessness is both a long-awaited and deeply destabilising step. As our colleague Dr Pierre, who passed away in March 2025, often reminded us: moving is one of the most stressful events in a person’s life.

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Neither a calling nor a sacrifice: providing care in the face of structural violence

I have been working in the healthcare and social sector for almost nine years. I joined Infirmiers de Rue / Straatverplegers more than six years ago—first as a field nurse, then as co-coordinator of the Housing First team (housing). My work has taken place on the street, in people’s homes, and in precarious living situations—where “classic” care pathways no longer reach people, or do not reach them sufficiently.
 

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