Viral Hepatitis Epidemiology and Prevention Program, The Kirby Institute (formerly the National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research), University of New South Wales, New South Wales, 2052, Australia.
J Urban Health. 2013 Aug;90(4):699-716. doi: 10.1007/s11524-012-9730-6.
High rates of substance dependence are consistently documented among homeless people, and are associated with a broad range of negative outcomes among this population. Investigations of homelessness among drug users are less readily available. This study examined the prevalence and correlates of housing instability among clients of needle syringe programs (NSPs) via the Australian NSP Survey, annual cross-sectional seroprevalence studies among NSP attendees. Following self-completion of a brief, anonymous survey and provision of a capillary blood sample by 2,396 NSP clients, multivariate logistic regressions identified the variables independently associated with housing instability. Nineteen percent of ANSPS participants reported current unstable housing, with primary ('sleeping rough'; 5 %), secondary (staying with friends/relatives or in specialist homelessness services; 8 %), and tertiary (residential arrangements involving neither secure lease nor private facilities; 6 %) homelessness all evident. Extensive histories of housing instability were apparent among the sample: 66 % reported at least one period of sleeping rough, while 77 % had shifted between friends/relatives (73 %) and/or resided in crisis accommodation (52 %). Participants with a history of homelessness had cycled in and out of homelessness over an average of 10 years; and one third reported first being homeless before age 15. Compared to their stably housed counterparts, unstably housed participants were younger, more likely to be male, of Indigenous Australian descent, and to report previous incarceration; they also reported higher rates of key risk behaviors including public injecting and receptive sharing of injecting equipment. The high prevalence of both historical and current housing instability among this group, particularly when considered in the light of other research documenting the many adverse outcomes associated with this particular form of disadvantage, highlights the need for increased supply of secure, affordable public housing in locations removed from established drug markets and serviced by health, social, and welfare support agencies.
无家可归人群中物质依赖率一直居高不下,与该人群的一系列负面后果密切相关。针对吸毒者无家可归问题的研究则相对较少。本研究通过澳大利亚针具交换项目(NSP)调查,对 NSP 参与者年度横断面血清流行率研究,调查了 NSP 客户中住房不稳定的流行率和相关因素。在 2396 名 NSP 客户完成简短匿名调查并提供毛细血管血样后,多变量逻辑回归确定了与住房不稳定独立相关的变量。19%的 NSP 参与者报告目前住房不稳定,主要是(“睡在街头”;5%)、次要(与朋友/亲戚或专门的无家可归者服务机构居住;8%)和三级(不包括安全租约或私人设施的居住安排;6%)无家可归现象均存在。样本中明显存在广泛的住房不稳定历史:66%的人报告至少有一段时间睡在街头,而 77%的人在朋友/亲戚(73%)和/或居住在危机住宿(52%)之间搬来搬去。有住房不稳定史的参与者平均在无家可归状态中进出 10 年以上;三分之一的人在 15 岁之前就首次无家可归。与稳定住房者相比,不稳定住房者更年轻,更可能是男性,有澳大利亚原住民血统,有入狱经历;他们还报告了更高的关键风险行为发生率,包括在公共场所注射和接受共用注射设备。这一群体中历史和当前住房不稳定的高发生率,尤其是考虑到其他研究记录了与这种特殊形式的劣势相关的许多不利后果,突出了需要增加安全、负担得起的公共住房供应,这些住房应远离成熟的毒品市场,并由卫生、社会和福利支持机构提供服务。