评估Connect 2 Care对无家可归者和弱势住房客户居住稳定性的影响

Kyle Dewsnap, H. Kamran, K. Rondeau, A. Polachek, Gabriel E. Fabreau, K. McBrien
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引用次数: 2

摘要

某些类型的住房不稳定,如丧失抵押品赎回权和无家可归,与较差的身心健康有关。“连接2护理”(C2C)方案的目标是医疗复杂、居住不稳定的个人,主要目的是减少急性护理的利用,并将客户与适当的社区护理联系起来。然而,由于住房状况是健康的基本决定因素,该团队还帮助客户寻找永久住房。由于C2C计划旨在改善其客户的健康状况,我们希望这种干预对客户的住房稳定性产生积极影响。目的确定C2C项目是否有效减少住房不稳定因素,如住房搬迁频率和在不稳定住房(如庇护所或睡在外面)中花费的时间。方法对C2C患者进行6个月和12个月的随访调查。在这两项调查中,参与者都被提示使用住宅时间线回访(rTLFB)清单描述他们的住房历史。从他们进入C2C之前的6个月开始,参与者创建了一个12到18个月的时间表,详细说明了他们的居住地点和住房转换次数。客户提供的位置描述分为稳定的、临时的、机构的或字面上的无家可归者。然后计算每个人的住房转换次数和在每种住房类别中花费的时间比例。使用Wilcoxon配对秩检验和Holm多重性校正来评估在三个独特时间段内花费的时间比例的变化。结果自2018年9月以来,从100个独立客户收集了住房数据。通过对比摄入C2C之前的6个月和摄入C2C之后的6 - 12个月,我们观察到,无家可归的时间显著减少(p < 0.001),换房子的次数显著减少(p = 0.014)。参与项目后,C2C客户的住房稳定性有所改善。该研究可能受到C2C人群抽样不完整的限制。基于我们的研究结果,应该进一步研究住房稳定性的提高与健康状况的提高之间的关系。C2C研究团队感谢Alberta Innovates和加拿大卫生研究所的财政支持。作者没有利益冲突要声明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing the impact of Connect 2 Care on the residential stability of homeless and vulnerably housed clients
Background Certain kinds of housing instability, such as foreclosure and homelessness, have been associated with poorer physical and mental health. The Connect 2 Care (C2C) program targets medically complex individuals who are unstably housed, primarily aimed at reducing acute care utilization and connecting clients to appropriate community-based care. However, because housing status is a fundamental determinant of health, the team also assists clients in finding permanent housing. As the C2C program aims to improve the health of its clients, we hope that this intervention positively impacts the housing stability of clients. Objective To determine whether the C2C program is effective in reducing factors of housing instability, such as the frequency of housing moves made, and time spent in unstable housing (such as shelters or sleeping outside). Methods C2C clients were asked to participate in 6- and 12- month follow-up surveys with a member of the research team. During both surveys, participants were prompted to describe their housing history using the Residential Time-Line Follow-Back (rTLFB) inventory. Starting at six months prior to their intake into C2C, participants created a twelve- to eighteen-month timeline that detailed their residential locations and number of housing transitions. Location descriptions provided by clients were categorized as stable, temporary, institutional, or literal homelessness. The number of housing transitions and the proportion of time spent in each housing category were then calculated for each individual. Changes in proportion of time spent over three unique time periods were evaluated using Wilcoxon’s paired rank test with Holm’s multiplicity correction. Results Since September 2018, housing data was collected from 100 unique clients. In comparing the six months preceding C2C intake with the six-to-twelve months after C2C intake, significant reductions in the amount of time spent in literal homelessness (p < 0.001) and reductions in the number of housing changes (p = 0.014) were observed. Discussion Housing stability for C2C clients improved after enrolment in the program. This study was potentially limited by incomplete sampling of the C2C population. Based on our findings, further research should be conducted in evaluating the relationship between increases in housing stability and increases of health status. Acknowledgements The C2C research team thanks Alberta Innovates and the Canadian Institute of Health Research for their financial support. The authors have no conflict of interests to state.
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