Managed alcohol programs in the context of Housing First

IF 0.6 Q3 URBAN STUDIES
R. Schiff, B. Pauly, Shana A. Hall, K. Vallance, Andrew Ivsins, Meaghan Brown, E. Gray, Bonnie Krysowaty, Joshua Evans
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Recently, Managed Alcohol Programs (MAPs have emerged as an alcohol harm reduction model for those living with severe alcohol use disorder (AUD) and experiencing homelessness. There is still a lack of clarity about the role of these programs in relation to Housing First (HF) discourse. The authors examine the role of MAPs within a policy environment that has become dominated by a focus on HF approaches to addressing homelessness. This examination includes a focus on Canadian policy contexts where MAPs originated and are still predominately located. The purpose of this paper is to trace the development of MAPs as a novel response to homelessness among people experiencing severe AUD and to describe the place of MAPs within a HF context.,This conceptual paper outlines the development of discourses related to persons experiencing severe AUD and homelessness, with a focus on HF and MAPs as responses to these challenges. The authors compare the key characteristics of MAPs with “core principles” and values as outlined in various definitions of HF.,MAPs incorporate many of the core values or principles of HF as outlined in some definitions, although not all. MAPs (and other housing/treatment models) provide critical housing and support services for populations who might not fit well with or who might not prefer HF models.,The “silver bullet” discourse surrounding HF (and harm reduction) can obscure the importance of programs (such as MAPs) that do not fully align with all HF principles and program models. This is despite the fact that MAPs (and other models) provide critical housing and support services for populations who might fall between the cracks of HF models. There is the potential for MAPs to help fill a gap in the application of harm reduction in HF programs. The authors also suggest a need to move beyond HF discourse, to embrace complexity and move toward examining what mixture of different housing and harm reduction supports are needed to provide a complete or comprehensive array of services and supports for people who use substances and are experiencing homelessness.
在住房优先的背景下管理酒精项目
最近,酒精管理计划(MAPs)已经成为严重酒精使用障碍(AUD)和无家可归者的酒精危害减少模式。这些项目在住房优先(HF)话语中的作用仍然不够明确。作者研究了map在政策环境中的作用,该环境已成为以HF方法解决无家可归问题的重点。这一审查包括对加拿大政策背景的关注,其中MAPs起源和仍然占主导地位。本文的目的是追溯map作为一种对严重AUD患者无家可归的新反应的发展,并描述map在HF背景下的地位。这篇概念性论文概述了与经历严重AUD和无家可归的人相关的话语的发展,重点是HF和map作为对这些挑战的回应。作者将map的关键特征与各种HF定义中概述的“核心原则”和价值观进行了比较。, map包含了一些定义中概述的HF的许多核心价值或原则,尽管不是全部。map(和其他住房/治疗模式)为可能不太适合或不喜欢HF模式的人群提供关键的住房和支持服务。围绕心力衰竭(和减少伤害)的“银弹”话语可能会模糊那些不完全符合心力衰竭原则和项目模式的项目(如MAPs)的重要性。尽管map(和其他模式)为可能落在HF模式之间的人群提供关键的住房和支持服务,但这一事实仍然存在。MAPs有潜力帮助填补在HF规划中减少危害应用方面的空白。作者还建议,有必要超越高频话语,拥抱复杂性,并转向研究需要什么样的不同住房和减少伤害支持的组合,才能为使用物质并正在经历无家可归的人提供完整或全面的服务和支持。
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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来源期刊
Housing Care and Support
Housing Care and Support URBAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
13
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