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Adam and Chief taking a rest after playing ball along the Elliot Bay trail before finding a place to sleep for the night.聽
Adam & Chief wrote: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever had a dog that I could just give away because I became homeless. However, you have to make that a priority. Every single second of the day he has to be top of the list. You have to worry about his food, his health, his safety and where everything is coming from next. And then you know it鈥檚 definitely not easy. I鈥檒l be glad to be off the streets when I do get off of them with him.鈥 Photo: Adam&Chief/UW Center for One Health


Sparked by a grant from the聽UW Population Health Initiative,聽the UW鈥檚 has created a series of pop-up聽galleries featuring autobiographical photographs made by people experiencing homelessness with their animal companions.

The first gallery was Oct. 4 in UW’s Red Square. Other pop-up gallery events are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 7, at Occidental Square聽in Seattle鈥檚 Pioneer Square district; Oct. 10 in Seattle鈥檚 Cal Anderson Park; and Oct. 13 in the Ballard Commons Park.

The events also feature data visualizations and community maps based on research conducted during the One Health project. In addition to the center, which is part of the UW Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences in the School of Public Health, collaborators include UW School of Law, School of Social Work and School of Nursing.

The center鈥檚 photo galleries will provide windows into the lives of people experiencing homelessness as they navigate the complexities of getting through their days and nights with a service animal, emotional support animal or pet.

鈥淚t made sense to start a foundation in storytelling, because this is an issue that is so heavily polarized, especially in Seattle, that data alone wouldn鈥檛 necessarily be the first way you were going to start the conversation,鈥 said聽, a photographer and One Health research coordinator.

Chanel sunbathes in her favorite spot in the RV. Dee Powers wrote: 鈥淟ife out here has some differences, but we鈥檙e all the same. We鈥檝e all got our own struggles and our own differences and our own difficulties, and it鈥檚 the same whether you live indoors or outdoors. We鈥檙e all people, you know? And people have pets. And pets are a huge comfort to these people鈥檚 lives.鈥 Photo: Dee Powers/UW Center for One Health Research

So Garland-Lewis, whose own photos and stories of people experiencing homelessness with their animals can be found at , put disposable cameras and notebooks into the hands of nearly 20 people to document their life experiences. The participants had the cameras for an average of 32 days and created a total of 800 images.

She hopes that when pet-loving Seattleites see the human-animal bond evident in these photos and stories, they will recognize 鈥渢hat they have something in common with someone they thought they had nothing in common with. That鈥檚 the door to the data, to look at the data, to look at the issue and think about solutions.鈥

Earlier this year, One Health researchers tested pilot clinics for including animals in health care services for the homeless. And just this past summer, they joined with veterinarians from Washington State University and Neighborcare Health to establish the聽One Health Clinic. At the clinic, a person could see a doctor and have their animal seen by a veterinarian.

, senior research and program coordinator at the center, also collected data through 44 qualitative and quantitative interviews to develop an understanding of the needs and gaps in services for people experiencing homelessness with their animals.聽Among her findings:

After recently entering housing, a hammock that once served as a sleep space on unsheltered nights is now a place for Grace Stroklund and her pet to relax near Green Lake. Grace Stroklund wrote: 鈥淚t鈥檚 been substantially comforting to have that bond, that connection with him, and it鈥檚 helped us strive for a better life for not just him but ourselves. The amount of care and effort it takes to have a being like that in your life makes you have to care about yourself and puts a lot of insight into who you are, too. It鈥檚 sparked so much more success and progress in our lives.鈥 Photo: Grace Stroklund/UW Center for One Health Research
  • 76 percent of people experiencing homelessness reported barriers to resources due to having an animal
  • 64 percent reported being harassed for having an animal
  • 55 percent indicated their pets were designated service animals or emotional support animals

Collaborators from the UW School of Law also explored the matrix of city, state and federal laws around animals designated as service or emotional support animals.聽The Law School group created a聽Know Your Rights聽document to help a homeless person navigate the legal complexities and be able to assert their rights when it comes to, for example, getting on a city bus with an animal.

Ramirez hopes the One Health Clinic approach to incorporating animals into health care for the homeless will catch on.

鈥淲e are getting calls from all over the country from service providers who want to learn how they can replicate our model,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e want to be able to build a protocol for how to set this up and how it works for other communities to use.鈥

Other organizations that supported the research include New Horizons, PSKS, Teen Feed, Youth Care, Roots, Street Youth Ministries, the Paws Project and Seattle Dogs Homeless Program.

The gallery had additional financial support from the schools of Social Work and Law.

For more information, contact Ramirez at ramirezv@uw.edu.

Facebook: Center for One Health Research @COHR.UW;聽One Health Clinic @OneHealthClinic