| Literature DB >> 26176621 |
Vicky Stergiopoulos1, Agnes Gozdzik2, Vachan Misir2, Anna Skosireva2, Jo Connelly3, Aseefa Sarang4, Adam Whisler2, Stephen W Hwang5, Patricia O'Campo6, Kwame McKenzie7.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Housing First (HF) is being widely disseminated in efforts to end homelessness among homeless adults with psychiatric disabilities. This study evaluates the effectiveness of HF with Intensive Case Management (ICM) among ethnically diverse homeless adults in an urban setting. 378 participants were randomized to HF with ICM or treatment-as-usual (TAU) in Toronto (Canada), and followed for 24 months. Measures of effectiveness included housing stability, physical (EQ5D-VAS) and mental (CSI, GAIN-SS) health, social functioning (MCAS), quality of life (QoLI20), and health service use. Two-thirds of the sample (63%) was from racialized groups and half (50%) were born outside Canada. Over the 24 months of follow-up, HF participants spent a significantly greater percentage of time in stable residences compared to TAU participants (75.1% 95% CI 70.5 to 79.7 vs. 39.3% 95% CI 34.3 to 44.2, respectively). Similarly, community functioning (MCAS) improved significantly from baseline in HF compared to TAU participants (change in mean difference = +1.67 95% CI 0.04 to 3.30). There was a significant reduction in the number of days spent experiencing alcohol problems among the HF compared to TAU participants at 24 months (ratio of rate ratios = 0.47 95% CI 0.22 to 0.99) relative to baseline, a reduction of 53%. Although the number of emergency department visits and days in hospital over 24 months did not differ significantly between HF and TAU participants, fewer HF participants compared to TAU participants had 1 or more hospitalizations during this period (70.4% vs. 81.1%, respectively; P=0.044). Compared to non-racialized HF participants, racialized HF participants saw an increase in the amount of money spent on alcohol (change in mean difference = $112.90 95% CI 5.84 to 219.96) and a reduction in physical community integration (ratio of rate ratios = 0.67 95% CI 0.47 to 0.96) from baseline to 24 months. Secondary analyses found a significant reduction in the number of days experiencing problems due to alcohol use among foreign-born (vs. Canadian-born) HF participants at 24 months (ratio of rate ratios = 0.19 95% 0.04 to 0.88), relative to baseline. Compared to usual care, HF with ICM can improve housing stability and community functioning and reduce the days of alcohol related problems in an ethnically diverse sample of homeless adults with mental illness within 2-years. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Controlled-Trials.com ISRCTN42520374.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26176621 PMCID: PMC4503775 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0130281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Participant flow through the study.
Baseline sample characteristics.
| Full Sample, | Housing First with ICM, (N = 204) | Treatment As Usual, (N = 174) | P Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, N (%) | 0.861 | ||||
| <30 | 92 (24.3) | 51 (25.0) | 41 (23.6) | ||
| 30–39 | 88 (23.3) | 47 (23.0) | 41 (23.6) | ||
| 40–49 | 120 (31.7) | 67 (32.8) | 53 (30.5) | ||
| ≥50 | 78 (20.6) | 39 (19.1) | 39 (22.4) | ||
| Gender, N (%) | |||||
| Female | 119 (32.2) | 65 (32.0) | 54 (32.3) | 0.948 | |
| Male | 251 (67.8) | 138 (68.0) | 113 (67.7) | ||
| Country of Birth, N (%) | |||||
| Canada | 191 (50.5) | 101 (49.5) | 90 (51.7) | 0.668 | |
| Other | 187 (49.5) | 103 (50.5) | 84 (48.3) | ||
| Native Language, N (%) | |||||
| English | 227 (60.1) | 123 (60.3) | 104 (59.8) | 0.917 | |
| Other | 151 (39.9) | 81(39.7) | 70 (40.2) | ||
| Ethnic or Cultural Identity, N (%) | |||||
| Racialized | 237 (62.7) | 135 (66.2) | 102 (58.6) | 0.13 | |
| Non Racialized | 141 (37.3) | 69 (33.8) | 72 (41.4) | ||
| Marital Status N (%) | |||||
| Divorced/Separated/Widowed | 108 (28.6) | 57 (28.1) | 51 (29.3) | 0.943 | |
| Married/Cohabitating With Partner | 14 (3.7) | 8 (3.9) | 6 (3.4) | ||
| Single, Never Married | 255 (67.6) | 138 (68.0) | 117 (67.2) | ||
| Number of Children, N (%) | |||||
| 0 | 264 (70.2) | 139 (68.1) | 125 (72.7) | 0.260 | |
| 1 | 61 (16.2) | 38 (18.6) | 23 (13.4) | ||
| 2 | 33 (8.8) | 15 (7.4) | 18 (10.5) | ||
| ≥3 | 18 (4.8) | 12 (5.9) | 6 (3.5) | ||
| Current Status, N (%) | |||||
| Absolutely Homeless | 347 (91.8) | 186 (91.2) | 161 (92.5) | 0.633 | |
| Precariously Housed | 31 (8.2) | 18 (8.8) | 13 (7.5) | ||
| Total Length of Homelessness, Mean y (SD) | 4.69 ± 5.71 | 4.55 ± 5.63 | 4.86 ± 5.82 | 0.512 | |
| Longest Period of Homelessness, Mean y (SD) | 2.54 ± 3.89 | 2.50 ± 4.12 | 2.58 ± 3.61 | 0.455 | |
| Education History, N (%) | |||||
| < High School | 178 (47.2) | 103 (50.5) | 75 (43.4) | 0.346 | |
| Completed High School | 70 (18.6) | 34 (16.7) | 36 (20.8) | ||
| Some Post-Secondary School | 129 (34.2) | 67 (32.8) | 62 (35.8) | ||
| Employment Status, N (%) | |||||
| Unemployed | 358 (94.7) | 193 (94.6) | 165 (94.8) | 0.924 | |
| Employed | 20 (5.3) | 11 (5.4) | 9 (5.2) | ||
| MCAS, score (SD) | 65.2 ± 3.39 | 65.2 ± 3.25 | 65.3 ± 3.55 | 0.479 | |
| MINI Results, N (%) | |||||
| Depressive Episode | 171 (45.2) | 92 (45.1) | 79 (45.4) | 0.953 | |
| Manic or Hypomanic Episode | 41 (10.8) | 25 (12.3) | 16 (9.2) | 0.340 | |
| Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder | 109 (28.8) | 61 (29.9) | 48 (27.6) | 0.620 | |
| Panic Disorder | 72 (19.0) | 38 (18.6) | 34 (19.5) | 0.822 | |
| Mood Disorder with Psychotic Features | 71 (18.8) | 38 (18.6) | 33 (19.0) | 0.933 | |
| Psychotic Disorder | 99 (26.2) | 55 (27.0) | 44 (25.3) | 0.712 | |
| Alcohol Dependence or Abuse | 152 (40.2) | 78 (38.2) | 74 (42.5) | 0.396 | |
| Substance Dependence or Abuse | 175 (46.3) | 93 (45.6) | 82 (47.1) | 0.765 | |
| Suicidality | 261 (69.0) | 135 (66.2) | 126 (72.4) | 0.191 |
P Values correspond to chi-square tests for categorical variables and Mann-Whitney tests for continuous variables.
1For the total sample, percentages shown were calculated as proportion of the total sample (N = 378) except for the following variables which had missing values: Marital status (N = 1); Number of children (N = 2); Total length of homelessness (N = 5); Longest period of homelessness (N = 3); Education History (N = 1). For group value calculations, percentages are calculated out of the total available data (excluding missing); therefore column totals for each variable add up to 100%. However, for questions with “yes/no” answers, only the proportion of individuals who indicated “yes” are provided.
2For Gender, individuals who self-identified as Other/Transgendered/Transsexual were not included (N = 8) due to small cell size
3 “Racialized” includes participants who indicated the following ethnic or cultural identities: East Asian (e.g. China, Japan, Korea), South Asian (e.g. India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka), South East Asian (e.g. Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam), Black African (e.g. Ghana, Kenya, Somalia), Black Canadian/American, Black Caribbean Region (e.g. Jamaica, Trinidad, Tobago), Latin American (e.g. Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica), Indian-Caribbean (e.g. Guyana with origins in India), Middle Eastern (e.g. Egypt, Iran, Israel, Palestine) or Mixed background (that included at least one of the ethnic groups listed above).
4 The “Non Racialized” category includes participants who indicated the following ethnicities: White-Canada, White-Europe and Other and includes participants who self-identified as Aboriginal (n = 18).
5 Median values (y) for Total Length of Homelessness: Full sample: 2.67, Housing First with ICM: 2.50, Treatment as Usual: 2.83.
6Median values (y) for Longest Period of Homelessness: Full sample: 1.0, Housing First with ICM: 1.0, Treatment as Usual: 1.0.
7Median values for MCAS score: Full sample: 65.0, Housing First with ICM: 65.0, Treatment As Usual: 65.0
8MINI Diagnoses all represent current diagnoses established at baseline.
9Suicidality was assessed as low, medium, or high; results here are shown with categories collapsed.
Fig 2Primary study outcome, by treatment group and ethnicity.
Values correspond to adjusted means and bars correspond to standard errors from linear regression model (using a mixed effect model framework) for the percentage of days stably housed over 24 month follow-up period for HF-ICM and TAU groups among participants, by ethnicity.
Fig 3Select secondary outcomes, mean (95% CI), by treatment group over time.
Solid and dashed lines indicate the HF-ICM and TAU groups, respectively.
Fig 4Mean (95% CI) amount spent on alcohol, by treatment group and ethnicity over time.
Solid and dashed lines indicate the HF-ICM and TAU groups, respectively. Among racialized participants, HF-ICM participants decreased spending from $32.30 at baseline to $30.32 at 24 months, while TAU participants increased spending from $36.50 to $44.29 from baseline to 24 months, respectively. Among non-racialized participants, HF-ICM participants decreased spending from $91.69 at baseline to $66.73 at 24 months, while their TAU counterparts increased from $105.91 to $203.63 from baseline to 24-months, respectively. All values are in $CAD.