| Literature DB >> 27114873 |
Colette L Auerswald1, Jessica S Lin2, Andrea Parriott3.
Abstract
Objectives. The mortality rate of a street-recruited homeless youth cohort in the United States has not yet been reported. We examined the six-year mortality rate for a cohort of street youth recruited from San Francisco street venues in 2004. Methods. Using data collected from a longitudinal, venue-based sample of street youth 15-24 years of age, we calculated age, race, and gender-adjusted mortality rates. Results. Of a sample of 218 participants, 11 died from enrollment in 2004 to December 31, 2010. The majority of deaths were due to suicide and/or substance abuse. The death rate was 9.6 deaths per hundred thousand person-years. The age, race and gender-adjusted standardized mortality ratio was 10.6 (95% CI [5.3-18.9]). Gender specific SMRs were 16.1 (95% CI [3.3-47.1]) for females and 9.4 (95% CI [4.0-18.4]) for males. Conclusions. Street-recruited homeless youth in San Francisco experience a mortality rate in excess of ten times that of the state's general youth population. Services and programs, particularly housing, mental health and substance abuse interventions, are urgently needed to prevent premature mortality in this vulnerable population.Entities:
Keywords: Homeless youth; Longitudinal; Mortality; Street sample; United states
Year: 2016 PMID: 27114873 PMCID: PMC4841235 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Mortality rates, person-years of observation, and standardized mortality rates in published studies (or study subsets) of homeless youth.
| Age range | Subject recruitment | Follow up (years, person years) | Mortality rate (per 1,000 person-years) | SMR (CI) | Reference population | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia ( | 15–34 | Shelter/service record review | 3 (12,481) | 6.03 | 3.8 (2.8–5.7) | Philadelphia general population |
| Boston ( | 18–24 | Health care services record review | 6 | Males: 5.34 Females: 1.96 | Males: 5.9 (2.1–17.0) | Boston general population |
| New York ( | 20–24 | Random recruitment at shelters | 7 | Males: 6.85 Females: no deaths | Males: 4.2 (0.4–11.9) | US population |
| New York ( | 20–24 | Shelter record review | Mean: 11.4 (975,916) | Males: 4.63 Females: 2.87 | NR | |
| Toronto ( | 18–24 | Shelter record review | 2 (22,958) | 4.21 | 8.3 (4.4–15.6) | Toronto general population |
| Montreal ( | 14–25 | Service-based recruitment | 6 (2,822) | 9.21 | 11.4 (7.4–16.7) | Quebec province general population |
| Montreal ( | 14–25 | Service-based recruitment | 5 | 1.9 | 3.0 (1.0–6.9) | Quebec province general population |
| Stockholm ( | 20–29 | Social/temperance aid service record review | 3 | NR | 9.0 | Stockholm male population |
| London ( | 16–29 | Death records | NR | 40.1 | 37.32 (20.38–62.63) | England and Wales male population |
| Copenhagen ( | 15–24 | Government record review | 10 | NR | Males: 13.3 | Copenhagen general populaiton |
| Rotterdam ( | 20–29 | Service record review | 10 (17,619) | Males: 9.11 Females: no deaths | NR | Rotterdam general population |
| Sydney ( | 20–29 | Shelter/psych service record review | 10 (range: 7–11) | NR | Males: 3.51 (1.29–7.64) | New South Wales general population |
Notes.
Age-adjusted.
Age-adjusted, males only.
Age and sex-adjusted.
Characteristics of study cohort survivors and decedents.
| Survivors ( | Decedents ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 135 (65.2%) | 8 (72.7%) |
| Female | 72 (34.8%) | 3 (27.3%) |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| Non-Latino/Hispanic White | 102 (49.3%) | 8 (72.7%) |
| Non-Latino/Hispanic Black | 32 (15.5%) | 0 |
| Native American/Alaskan | 6 (2.9%) | 0 |
| Latino/Hispanic | 3 (1.4%) | 0 |
| Pacific Islander/Polynesian | 2 (1.0%) | 0 |
| Asian/Asian American | 0 | 0 |
| 2 or more races | 55 (26.6%) | 3 (27.3%) |
| Unknown | 7 (3.4%) | 0 |
| Age at recruitment | ||
| 15–17 | 19 (9.2%) | 0 |
| 18–20 | 83 (40.1%) | 4 (36.4%) |
| 21 or older | 105 (50.7%) | 7 (63.6%) |
| Age at 1st unstable housing | ||
| 14 or younger | 73 (35.3%) | 6 (54.5%) |
| 15–17 | 82 (39.6%) | 4 (36.4%) |
| 18–20 | 46 (22.2%) | 1 (9.1%) |
| 21 or older | 6 (2.9%) | 0 |
| Any services in last 3 mo. | 122 (58.9%) | 5 (45.5%) |
| Any healthcare in last 3 mo. | 63 (30.4%) | 4 (36.4%) |
| Survival sex | 36 (17.4%) | 2 (18.2%) |
| Ever injected drugs | 75 (36.2%) | 7 (63.6%) |
| MSM | 14 (13.5% of males) | 0 (0% of males) |
| High school graduate (only among respondents > 18 yo) | 109 (52.7%) | 5 (50.0%) |
Notes.
None of the youth in the sample identified as transgender.
There were no statistical differences between the characteristics of survivors and decedents at the p < .05 or p < .1 level.
p = .11.
Though there were not missing data for other questions, there were missing data for men reporting having sex with men (39/143). However, all male decedents responded.
Causes of death for cohort decedents.
| ICD 10 code | Description |
|---|---|
| B20.8 | HIV disease resulting in other infectious and parasitic diseases |
| F10.2 | Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol (Dependence syndrome) |
| F19.1 | Mental and behavioral disorders due to multiple-drug use and use of other psychoactive substances (Harmful use) |
| F19.2 | Mental and behavioral disorders due to multiple-drug use and use of other psychoactive substances (Dependence syndrome) |
| R99 | Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality |
| W80 | Inhalation and ingestion of other objects causing obstruction of respiratory tract |
| X44 | Accidental poisoning by and exposure to other and unspecified drugs, medicaments, and biological substances |
| X64 | Intentional self-poisoning (suicide) by and exposure to other and unspecified drugs, medicaments, and biological substances |
| X74 | Intentional self harm (suicide) by other and unspecified firearm damage |
| X81 | Intentional self harm (suicide) by jumping or lying before moving object |
| X95 | Assault (homicide) by other and unspecified firearm discharge |