“I’m not homeless, I’m houseless”: identifying as homeless and associations with service utilization among Los Angeles homeless young people

IF 1.1 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
H. Winetrobe, H. Rhoades, E. Rice, N. Milburn, R. Petering
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

ABSTRACT Little is known about homeless young people’s identification of being homeless and how that identity may or may not be associated with service utilization. This study of 444 homeless young people attending Los Angeles area drop-in centers explores the associations of demographic characteristics, homelessness characteristics, negative lifetime experiences, mental health symptoms, technology use, and past month service utilization with identifying as homeless. Fifty-two percent of the sample identified as being homeless. Being Black, a current traveler, and history of injection drug use were all significantly associated with a decreased likelihood in identifying as homeless. However, having fair/poor health, accessing shelter services, and reporting one’s own substance use as a reason for homelessness were all significantly associated with identifying as homeless. There are important service implications for reaching young people who are in need of services but may not identify with the target population label of homeless.
“我不是无家可归,我是无家可归者”:洛杉矶无家可归的年轻人中无家可归者的身份及其与服务利用的联系
关于无家可归的年轻人对无家可归的认同,以及这种认同与服务利用之间的关系,我们知之甚少。这项针对444名参加洛杉矶地区收容中心的无家可归年轻人的研究,探讨了人口统计学特征、无家可归特征、负面生活经历、心理健康症状、技术使用和过去一个月的服务利用率与认定为无家可归者的关系。52%的样本被认定为无家可归。身为黑人、目前的旅行者和注射吸毒史都与无家可归的可能性降低显著相关。然而,健康状况尚可/较差、获得收容所服务以及报告自己的药物使用情况是无家可归的原因,这些都与认定为无家可归者有很大关系。对于那些需要服务但可能不认同无家可归目标人群标签的年轻人来说,这对服务有重要影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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14.30%
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40
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