The Effective Public Health Practice Project, School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Aug 10;11:638. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-638.
Research on interventions to positively impact health and housing status of people who are homeless has received substantially increased attention over the past 5 years. This rapid review examines recent evidence regarding interventions that have been shown to improve the health of homeless people, with particular focus on the effect of these interventions on housing status.
A total of 1,546 articles were identified by a structured search of five electronic databases, a hand search of grey literature and relevant journals, and contact with experts. Two reviewers independently screened the first 10% of titles and abstracts for relevance. Inter-rater reliability was high and as a result only one reviewer screened the remaining titles and abstracts. Articles were included if they were published between January 2004 and December 2009 and examined the effectiveness of an intervention to improve the health or healthcare utilization of people who were homeless, marginally housed, or at risk of homelessness. Two reviewers independently scored all relevant articles for quality.
Eighty-four relevant studies were identified; none were of strong quality while ten were rated of moderate quality. For homeless people with mental illness, provision of housing upon hospital discharge was effective in improving sustained housing. For homeless people with substance abuse issues or concurrent disorders, provision of housing was associated with decreased substance use, relapses from periods of substance abstinence, and health services utilization, and increased housing tenure. Abstinent dependent housing was more effective in supporting housing status, substance abstinence, and improved psychiatric outcomes than non-abstinence dependent housing or no housing. Provision of housing also improved health outcomes among homeless populations with HIV. Health promotion programs can decrease risk behaviours among homeless populations.
These studies provide important new evidence regarding interventions to improve health, housing status, and access to healthcare for homeless populations. The additional studies included in this current review provide further support for earlier evidence which found that coordinated treatment programs for homeless persons with concurrent mental illness and substance misuse issues usually result in better health and access to healthcare than usual care. This review also provides a synthesis of existing evidence regarding interventions that specifically support homeless populations with HIV.
过去 5 年来,人们对能够积极改善无家可归者健康和住房状况的干预措施的研究给予了极大关注。本快速综述检查了最近有关干预措施的证据,这些措施已被证明可改善无家可归者的健康,特别关注这些干预措施对住房状况的影响。
通过对五个电子数据库、灰色文献和相关期刊的手工搜索以及与专家联系,共确定了 1546 篇文章。两名审查员独立筛选了前 10%的标题和摘要的相关性。两位审查员的评分者间信度较高,因此只有一位审查员筛选了其余的标题和摘要。如果文章发表于 2004 年 1 月至 2009 年 12 月之间,并且检查了改善无家可归者、边缘住房者或有住房风险者的健康或医疗保健的干预措施的有效性,则将其纳入研究。两名审查员独立对所有相关文章进行了质量评分。
确定了 84 项相关研究;没有一项是高质量的,有 10 项是中等质量的。对于有精神疾病的无家可归者,在出院时提供住房可有效改善持续住房状况。对于有药物滥用问题或并发障碍的无家可归者,提供住房与减少物质使用、物质戒断期间的复发以及卫生服务的利用和增加住房保有量有关。与非依赖物质的住房或没有住房相比,依赖物质的住房更能有效地支持住房状况、物质戒断和改善精神科结局。提供住房也改善了艾滋病毒感染者的健康状况。健康促进计划可以减少无家可归者的危险行为。
这些研究为改善无家可归者的健康、住房状况和获得医疗保健的干预措施提供了重要的新证据。本综述中纳入的额外研究进一步支持了早期的证据,即对于同时患有精神疾病和物质滥用问题的无家可归者,协调治疗方案通常比常规护理更能改善健康和获得医疗保健。本综述还综合了现有关于专门为艾滋病毒感染者提供支持的干预措施的证据。