Van Straaten Barbara, Rodenburg Gerda, Van der Laan Jorien, Boersma Sandra N, Wolf Judith R L M, Van de Mheen Dike
1 Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands 2 IVO Addiction Research Institute, Rotterdam, the Netherlands
1 Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands 2 IVO Addiction Research Institute, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Eur J Public Health. 2016 Feb;26(1):111-6. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckv142. Epub 2015 Aug 6.
Previous studies have shown that substance use among homeless people is a prevalent problem that is associated with longer durations of homelessness. Most studies of substance use among the homeless were carried out outside Europe and have limited generalizability to European countries. This study therefore aimed to address the prevalence of substance use among homeless people in the Netherlands, the pattern of their use and the relationship with housing status at follow-up.
This study included 344 participants (67.1% of the initial cohort) who were followed from baseline to 18 months after the baseline interview. Multinomial logistic regression analyses examined the relationship between substance use and housing status.
The most reported substances which were used among these homeless people were cannabis (43.9%) and alcohol (≥5 units on one occasion) (30.7%). Other substances were used by around 5% or less of the participants. Twenty-seven percent were classified as substance misuser and 20.9% as substance dependent. The odds to be marginally housed (4.14) or institutionalized (2.12) at follow-up compared to being housed of participants who were substance users were significantly higher than those of participants who did not use substances. The odds to be homeless were more than twice as high (2.80) for participants who were substance dependent compared with those who were not.
Homeless people who use substances have a more disadvantageous housing situation at follow-up than homeless people who do not use substances. Attention is needed to prevent and reduce long-term homelessness among substance-using homeless people.
先前的研究表明,无家可归者中的物质使用是一个普遍存在的问题,且与无家可归的持续时间较长有关。大多数关于无家可归者物质使用的研究是在欧洲以外进行的,对欧洲国家的普遍适用性有限。因此,本研究旨在探讨荷兰无家可归者中物质使用的流行情况、使用模式以及随访时与住房状况的关系。
本研究纳入了344名参与者(占初始队列的67.1%),从基线开始随访至基线访谈后的18个月。多项逻辑回归分析检验了物质使用与住房状况之间的关系。
这些无家可归者中报告最多使用的物质是大麻(43.9%)和酒精(一次饮用≥5单位)(30.7%)。其他物质的使用者约占参与者的5%或更少。27%被归类为物质滥用者,20.9%为物质依赖者。与未使用物质的参与者相比,随访时物质使用者中处于边缘住房状态(4.14)或机构收容状态(2.12)的几率显著高于未使用物质的参与者。与未依赖物质的参与者相比,物质依赖的参与者无家可归的几率高出两倍多(2.80)。
使用物质的无家可归者在随访时的住房状况比不使用物质的无家可归者更不利。需要关注预防和减少使用物质的无家可归者中的长期无家可归现象。