| Literature DB >> 22978561 |
Stephen W Hwang1, Vicky Stergiopoulos, Patricia O'Campo, Agnes Gozdzik.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The At Home/Chez Soi (AH/CS) Project is a randomized controlled trial of a Housing First intervention to meet the needs of homeless individuals with mental illness in five cities across Canada. The objectives of this paper are to examine the approach to participant recruitment and community engagement at the Toronto site of the AH/CS Project, and to describe the baseline demographics of participants in Toronto.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22978561 PMCID: PMC3538556 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Participant flow through study. *Operational definitions for High Needs vs. Moderate Needs. High Needs participants must have: 1) A score <62 on the Multnomah Community Ability Scale (MCAS); AND 2) A Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) diagnosis of current psychotic or bipolar disorder OR observations of psychotic disorder by referral source; AND 3) One of: a) Two or more hospitalizations for mental illness in any one year in last five years OR b) Co-morbid substance use OR c) Recent arrest or incarceration (or don't know or declined to answer). All other eligible participants were considered Moderate Needs. Participants with Moderate Needs who self-identified membership in an Ethno-Racial group were given a choice to participate in a regular ICM program or an Ethno-racial focused ICM program, as long as space was available in both groups.
Study eligibility (A) and ineligibility criteria (B) and reasons (and numbers) for exclusion of referral (C)
| 1. ≥18 years old | 1. Relatively homeless3 | ||
| 2. Absolutely homeless1 or Precariously housed2 | 2. Illegal status (not a Canadian citizen, landed immigrant, refugee or refugee claimant) | ||
| 3. Presence of serious mental disorder with or without co-existing substance use problem (no formal diagnosis necessary for study entry) | 3. No serious mental disorder | ||
| 4. Not currently receiving Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) or Intensive Case Management (ICM) | 4. Current client of an ACT or ICM | ||
| Referrals delayedprior to potential screening* | 445 | Did not meet serious mental disorder criteria | 59 |
| Not absolutely homeless/precariously housed | 44 | Declined consent | 54 |
| Current client of ACT/ICM | 29 | Was not absolutely homeless/ precariously housed | 16 |
| Did not show up for Screening interview | 24 | Unable to provide informed consent | 4 |
| Lost contact with study staff | 17 | Lack of space in relevant group | 5 |
| Did not meet serious mental disorder criteria | 14 | Current client of ACT/ICM | 9 |
| Did not meet requirements of ICM | 9 | Incomplete referral | 1 |
| No longer interested in participating in study | 9 | Participant wasn’t aware of referral and declined participation | 1 |
| Found housing | 4 | Withdrew | 1 |
| Not eligible to receive social assistance income support | 4 | | |
| Not informed of study by referral source | 3 | | |
| Moved to another country | 2 | | |
| In justice system | 2 | | |
| Deceased | 2 | | |
| Deported | 2 | | |
| Secured own housing | 1 | | |
| Withdrew | 1 | | |
| Unable to provide consent | 1 | | |
| Declined permission to be referred | 1 | | |
| Not of age | 1 | | |
| Too sick | 1 | ||
*Referrals were kept for a period of up to three months. During the early phases of the study there were more referrals than staff available to accept new participants; therefore, many referrals were delayed beyond the three month period and were excluded prior to screening.
1Absolutely homeless: no fixed place to stay for at least the past 7 nights with little likelihood of finding a place in the upcoming month.
2Precariously housed: housed in single room occupancy (SRO), rooming house, or hotel/motel as a primary residence AND in the past year have a history of 2 or more episodes of being Absolutely Homeless OR one episode of being absolutely homeless of at least 4 weeks duration in the past year.
Relatively homeless: individuals who inhabit spaces that do not meet the basic health and safety standards, such as living in overcrowded or hazardous conditions.
Instruments used in At Home/Chez Soi Toronto site study at screening and baseline visits, their acronyms and references
| ACC | Health Service Access Items | [ |
| CIS | Community Integration Scale | [ |
| CMC | Comorbid Conditions List | [ |
| CSI | (Modified) Colorado Symptom Index | [ |
| DHHS | Demographics, Housing, Vocational and service Use History | [ |
| EQ-5D | EuroQuol 5D | [ |
| FS | Social Support Items and Food Security | [ |
| GAIN-SPS | Global Assessment of Individual Need – Substance Problem Scale | [ |
| HSJSU | Health, Social Justice Service Use Inventory | [ |
| III | Interviewer Impressions Items | |
| MCAS | Multnomah Community Ability Scale | [ |
| MINI | MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview | [ |
| QoLI-20 | Quality of Life Index – 20 Item | [ |
| RAS-22 | Recovery Assessment Scale – 22 items | [ |
| SCNR | Eligibility Screening Instrument | |
| SF-12 | SF12 Health Survey v. 2 | [ |
| T-SU | Substance Use | |
| T-DIET | Diet | |
| T-PH | Preventative Health | |
| T-PHYS | Physiological Measures | |
| T-SB | Supplementary BL | |
| T-CD-RISC-2 | Resilience | |
| T-PSC | Stress |
Characteristics and details of intervention groups
| Treatment name | Intensive Case Management | Ethno-Racial Intensive Case Management | Assertive Case Management |
| Rent allowance# | $600 | $600 | $600 |
| Service team | Intensive case management (ICM) | Intensive case management (ICM) with focus on ethno-racial diversity | Assertive community treatment (ACT) |
| Name of service team | Toronto North Support Services | Across Boundaries | COTA Health |
| Participant/staff ratio | 20:1 | 20:1 | 10:1 |
| Availability to participant | 5 days/week; 8 hours/day | 7 days/week; 12 hours/day | 7 days/week; 24 hours/day |
| Location of service | In the community | In the community | In the community |
| Services provided | ▪ Participants are matched to a Case Manager who works with the participant to develop a service plan | ▪ Same as the regular ICM services with the addition of services oriented towards the ethno-racial population | ▪ Participants have access to entire ACT team, which will include a psychiatrist and nurse |
| ▪ Focus is on independent living and providing supports that increase personal independence over time | ▪ This service provider takes a more holistic approach to mental health care that recognizes spiritual, emotion, mental, physical, social, economic, cultural, linguistic and broader environmental aspects of life including social determinants of health | ▪ ACT team provides all of the relevant services, including case management, initial/ongoing assessment, psychiatric services, employment and housing assistance, family support and education, substance use services and other services and support to allow the individual to live successfully in the community | |
| ▪ Case manger will accompanies participant to appointments (with psychiatrist/social workers, etc.) | ▪ Main goal of model is to assist participants to help build support network, including with family and friends | | |
| Additional services | | ▪ Programs and initiatives that are available to participants: | |
| – integrative peer support | |||
| – skills building | |||
| – social and recreational activities | |||
| – support groups, alternative and complementary therapies (including art and music therapy) | |||
| – creative expressions | |||
| – community kitchen and | |||
| – individual and community outreach | |||
| Crisis support services | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Non-English services1 | No | Yes | No |
| Length of treatment | Minimum 1 year | Minimum 1 year | Minimum 1 year |
1Services are provided in languages other than English.
Baseline characteristics of study participants by need level and randomization group
| | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | |||||
| Age | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| <30 | 138 (24.0) | | 41 (23.6) | 51 (25.0) | | 19 (19.0) | 27 (27.8) | |
| 30-39 | 134 (23.3) | | 41 (23.6) | 47 (23.0) | | 22 (22.0) | 24 (24.7) | |
| 40-49 | 183 (31.8) | | 53 (30.5) | 67 (32.8) | | 34 (34.0) | 29 (29.9) | |
| ≥50 | 120 (20.9) | | 39 (22.4) | 39 (19.1) | | 25 (25.0) | 17 (17.5) | |
| Gender | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| Female | 170 (29.6) | | 54 (31.0) | 65 (31.9) | | 19 (19.0) | 32 (33.0) | |
| Male | 394 (68.5) | | 113 (64.9) | 138 (67.6) | | 79 (79.0) | 64 (66.0) | |
| Other3 | 11 (1.9) | | 7 (4.0) | 1 (0.5) | | 2 (2.0) | 1 (1.0) | |
| Country of birth | | 1 (0.2) | | | | | ||
| Canada | 312 (54.3) | | 90 (51.7) | 101 (49.5) | | 60 (60.0) | 61 (63.5) | |
| Other | 262 (45.6) | | 84 (48.3) | 103 (50.5) | | 40 (40.0) | 35 (36.5) | |
| Native language | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| English | 369 (64.2) | | 104 (59.8) | 123 (60.3) | | 69 (69.0) | 73 (75.3) | |
| French | 17 (3.0) | | 3 (1.7) | 9 (4.4) | | 1 (1.0) | 4 (4.1) | |
| Other | 189 (32.9) | | 67 (38.5) | 72 (35.3) | | 30 (30.0) | 20 (20.6) | |
| Ethnic or cultural identity | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| Aboriginal | 28 (4.9) | | 8 (4.6) | 10 (4.9) | | 3 (3.0) | 7 (7.2) | |
| Ethno-racial4 | 338 (58.8) | | 102 (58.6) | 135 (66.2) | | 54 (54.0) | 47 (48.5) | |
| Non ethno-racial5 | 209 (36.3) | | 64 (36.8) | 59 (28.9) | | 43 (43.0) | 43 (44.3) | |
| Marital status | | 3 (0.5) | | | | | ||
| Divorced/separated/widowed | 152 (26.4) | | 51 (29.3) | 57 (28.1) | | 25 (25.0) | 19 (20.0) | |
| Married/cohabitating with partner | 21 (3.7) | | 6 (3.4) | 8 (3.9) | | 4 (4.0) | 3 (3.2) | |
| Single, never married | 399 (69.4) | | 117 (67.2) | 138 (68.0) | | 71 (71.0) | 73 (76.8) | |
| Number of children | | 8 (1.4) | | | | | ||
| 0 | 410 (71.3) | | 125 (72.7) | 139 (68.1) | | 74 (77.1) | 72 (75.8) | |
| 1 | 80 (13.9) | | 23 (13.4) | 38 (18.6) | | 8 (8.3) | 11 (11.6) | |
| 2 | 55 (9.6) | | 18 (10.5) | 15 (7.4) | | 14 (14.6) | 8 (8.4) | |
| ≥3 | 22 (3.8) | | 6 (3.5) | 12 (5.9) | | 0 (0.0) | 4 (4.2) | |
| Current status | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| Absolutely homeless | 535 (93.0) | | 161 (92.5) | 186 (91.2) | | 97 (97.0) | 91 (93.8) | |
| Precariously housed | 40 (7.0) | | 13 (7.5) | 18 (8.8) | | 3 (3.0) | 6 (6.2) | |
| Total length of homelessness During lifetime (years) | 5.25 ± 6.19 | 13 (2.3) | 4.86 ± 5.82 | 4.56 ± 5.63 | 7.13 ± 7.34 | 5.57 ± 6.42 | ||
| Longest period of homelessness (years) | 2.92 ± 4.54 | 8 (1.4) | 2.58 ± 3.61 | 2.50 ± 4.12 | 4.07 ± 5.81 | 3.29 ± 5.27 | ||
| Education history | | 2 (0.3) | | | | | ||
| < High school | 279 (48.5) | | 75 (43.4) | 103 (50.5) | | 53 (53.5) | 48 (49.5) | |
| Completed high school | 108 (18.8) | | 36 (20.8) | 34 (16.7) | | 22 (22.2) | 16 (16.5) | |
| Some post-secondary school | 186 (32.3) | | 62 (35.8) | 67 (32.8) | | 24 (24.2) | 33 (34.0) | |
| Employment status | | 2 (0.3) | | | | | ||
| Unemployed | 549 (95.5) | | 165 (94.8) | 193 (94.6) | | 97 (98.0) | 94 (97.9) | |
| Employed | 24 (4.2) | | 9 (5.2) | 11 (5.4) | | 2 (2.0) | 2 (2.1) | |
| MCAS | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | ||
| More disability (17-47) | 29 (5.0) | | 0 (0.0) | 1 (0.5) | | 14 (14.0) | 14 (14.4) | |
| Some disability (48-62) | 192 (33.4) | | 14 (8.0) | 9 (4.4) | | 86 (86.0) | 83 (85.6) | |
| Mild disability (63-85) | 354 (61.6) | | 160 (92.0) | 194 (95.1) | | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Documented health record of a mental disorder | 161 (28.0) | 9 (1.6) | 36 (20.7) | 44 (22.1) | 44 (44.4) | 37 (39.4) | ||
| MINI Results | | 0 (0.0) | | | | | | |
| Current depressive episode | 206 (35.8) | | 79 (45.4) | 92 (45.1) | 18 (18.0) | 17 (17.5) | ||
| Current manic Episode or hypomanic episode | 61 (10.6) | | 16 (9.2) | 25 (12.3) | 7 (7.0) | 13 (13.4) | ||
| Current PTSD | 134 (23.3) | | 48 (27.6) | 61 (29.9) | 11 (11.0) | 14 (14.4) | ||
| Current panic disorder | 81 (14.1) | | 34 (19.5) | 38 (18.6) | 3 (3.0) | 6 (6.2) | ||
| Current mood disorder with psychotic features | 119 (20.7) | | 33 (19.0) | 38 (18.6) | 25 (25.0) | 23 (23.7) | ||
| Current psychotic disorder | 215 (37.4) | | 44 (25.3) | 55 (27.0) | 60 (60.0) | 56 (57.7) | ||
| Current alcohol dependence | 166 (28.9) | | 57 (32.8) | 48 (23.5) | 30 (30.0) | 31 (32.0) | ||
| Current substance dependence | 218 (37.9) | | 69 (39.7) | 74 (36.3) | 32 (32.0) | 43 (44.3) | ||
| Current alcohol abuse | 80 (13.9) | | 17 (9.8) | 30 (14.7) | 16 (16.0) | 17 (17.5) | ||
| Current substance abuse | 52 (9.0) | | 13 (7.5) | 19 (9.3) | 8 (8.0) | 12 (12.4) | ||
| Current suicidality | | | | | | | ||
| | 203 (35.3) | | 64 (36.8) | 73 (35.8) | | 38 (38.0) | 28 (28.9) | |
| | 112 (19.5) | | 47 (27.0) | 37 (18.1) | | 13 (13.0) | 15 (15.5) | |
| | 60 (10.4) | | 15 (8.6) | 25 (12.3) | | 9 (9.0) | 11 (11.3) | |
| Cognitive impairment | | | | | | | | |
| Was in special class in school | 170 (29.6) | 18 (3.1) | 48 (28.1) | 58 (29.3) | 30 (30.6) | 34 (37.8) | ||
| Received extra help with learning in school | 196 (34.1) | 18 (3.1) | 63 (36.8) | 62 (31.3) | 33 (34.0) | 38 (41.8) | ||
| Thinks that has learning problem/disability | 207 (36.0) | 22 (3.8) | 70 (41.4) | 62 (31.3) | 37 (39.4) | 38 (41.3) | ||
| Was told have learning problem/disability | 180 (31.3) | 19 (3.3) | 56 (33.3) | 57 (28.6) | 33 (34.4) | 34 (36.6) | ||
| Functional Impairment | | | | | | | | |
| Needs assistance to meet nutritional needs | 101 (17.6) | 1 (0.2) | 21 (12.1) | 30 (14.8) | 20 (20.0) | 30 (30.9) | ||
| Needs assistance to maintain adequate personal hygiene | 129 (22.4) | 0 (0.0) | 23 (13.2) | 25 (12.3) | 42 (42.0) | 39 (40.2) | ||
| Needs assistance/unwilling to access needed resources | 413 (71.8) | 1 (0.2) | 110 (63.2) | 141 (69.5) | 79 (79.0) | 83 (85.6) | ||
| Needs assistance to manage finances | 425 (73.9) | 2 (0.3) | 126 (72.4) | 136 (67.0) | 79 (79.8) | 84 (86.6) | ||
| Needs assistance to acquire and maintain social network | 455 (79.1) | 0 (0.0) | 127 (73.0) | 163 (79.9) | 85 (85.0) | 80 (82.5) | ||
| | 0 (0.0) | | | | | |||
| Community health centres | 5 (1.0) | | 2 (1.1) | 1(0.5) | | 2 (2.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| CMHA (Canadian Mental Health Association) | 31 (5.4) | | 10 (5.7) | 7 (3.4) | | 5 (5.0) | 9 (9.3) | |
| Drop-ins | 67 (11.7) | | 21 (12.1) | 26 (12.7) | | 12 (12.0) | 8 (8.2) | |
| Hospitals | 80 (13.9) | | 12 (6.9) | 21 (10.3) | | 25 (25.0) | 22 (22.7) | |
| Social supports programs and justice systems6 | 25 (4.3) | | 6 (3.4) | 11 (5.4) | | 2 (2.0) | 6 (6.2) | |
| Mental health services | 45 (7.8) | | 10 (5.7) | 24 (11.8) | | 8 (8.0) | 3 (3.1) | |
| Other7 | 27 (4.7) | | 9 (5.2) | 12 (5.9) | | 5 (5.0) | 1 (1.0) | |
| Outreach programs | 57 (9.9) | | 15 (8.6) | 17 (8.3) | | 9 (9.0) | 16 (16.5) | |
| Shelters | 238 (41.4) | 89 (51.1) | 85 (41.7) | 32 (32.0) | 32 (33.0) | |||
1 For the total sample, percentages shown were calculated as proportion of the total sample (N = 575) and therefore the column totals for each variables will not add up to 100% if data was missing (see adjacent column with N and % Missing in total sample).
2 For calculation of the moderate needs and high needs group values, percentages are calculated out of the total available data (excluding missing), therefore column totals for each variables add up to 100%. However, questions with “yes/no” answers, only the proportion of individuals who indicated “yes” are provided)
3 “Other” category includes individuals who identify as Transgendered, Transsexual or Other.
4 “Ethno-racial” includes participants who indicated the following ethnicities: Black (includes Black-Africa, Black-Caribbean, and Black-Canada), East Asian, Indian-Caribbean, Latin American, Middle Eastern, South Asian, South-East Asian and Mixed Ethnicity.
5 The “Non Ethno-Racial” category includes participants who indicated the following ethnicities: White-Canada, White-Europe and Other.
6 This category includes Ontario Works and Ontario Disability Support Program (both provincial social support programs) as well as various justice system referrals (including jails, bail programs, and probation and parole offices).
7 The “Other” category includes the City of Toronto Assessment and Referral Centre (ARC), Aboriginal Legal Services, hospitals outside of the city of Toronto, self-referrals and any other agencies who did not clearly fit into any of the other categories.