Recommended Cardiometabolic Screening Guidelines for Unhoused Adults: A Street Medicine Needs Assessment

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Abstract

Background: Unhoused individuals face disproportionately high rates of preventable chronic disease due to fragmented access to care and prolonged exposure to environmental stressors. Street medicine programs offer a mobile, low-barrier model to assess and address these unmet needs. Despite well-documented disparities, no current literature provides numerically specific screening recommendation guidelines tailored to unhoused populations. This study fills that gap using clinical data from Street Medicine Phoenix (SMP), a mobile healthcare initiative serving urban Arizona. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 1,322 clinical encounters recorded by SMP between August 2023 and October 2024. Diagnoses and treatments were manually categorized. Blood pressure (BP) and glucose values were analyzed using descriptive statistics and compared against national norms (CDC 50th percentile and ADA guidelines). Kruskal-Wallis and Dunn’s tests assessed age-based differences, while chi-square and Mann-Whitney U tests examined glucose patterns. Results: The mean patient age was 51.4 years; 34.5% identified as female. Cardiovascular issues (39.4%) and routine screenings (39.6%) were most frequently documented. Systolic and diastolic BP values were significantly elevated across all age groups except those 60+, with even the 18–39 group showing median systolic BP above CDC norms (124.0 mmHg). Among 60 patients with fasting glucose data, 41.4% met ADA criteria for diabetes, and 10.7% of those without a known diagnosis had diabetic-range values. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that cardiometabolic disease may emerge earlier and more aggressively among unhoused individuals than in the general U.S. population, reflecting patterns of accelerated biological aging. The elevation of cohort-based BP percentiles suggests that current national benchmarks may underrepresent clinical risk in this group. We propose initiating blood pressure screening at age 18 and fasting glucose screening by age 35 in unhoused individuals—adaptations of existing USPSTF recommendations based on cohort-specific trends. These screening thresholds can be feasibly implemented in street medicine settings to promote earlier detection and improve long-term health outcomes. Trial Registration Not applicable.

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