Montgomery Ann Elizabeth, Byrne Thomas H, Treglia Daniel, Culhane Dennis P
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2016;27(2):911-22. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2016.0099.
Unsheltered homelessness is an important phenomenon yet difficult to study due to lack of data. The Veterans Health Administration administers a universal homelessness screener, which identifies housing status for Veterans screening positive for homelessness.
This study compared unsheltered and sheltered Veterans, assessed differences in rates of ongoing homelessness, and estimated a mixed-effect logistic regression model to examine the relationship between housing status and ongoing homelessness.
Eleven percent of Veterans who screened positive for homelessness were unsheltered; 40% of those who rescreened were homeless six months later, compared with less than 20% of sheltered Veterans. Unsheltered Veterans were 2.7 times as likely to experience ongoing homelessness.
Unsheltered Veterans differ from their sheltered counterparts-they are older, more likely to be male, less likely to have income-and may be good candidates for an intensive housing intervention. Future research will assess clinical characteristics and services utilization among this population.
无家可归者露宿街头是一个重要现象,但由于缺乏数据,研究起来颇具难度。退伍军人健康管理局实施了一项通用的无家可归筛查工具,用于确定对无家可归筛查呈阳性的退伍军人的住房状况。
本研究对露宿街头的退伍军人和有住所的退伍军人进行了比较,评估了持续无家可归率的差异,并估计了一个混合效应逻辑回归模型,以检验住房状况与持续无家可归之间的关系。
无家可归筛查呈阳性的退伍军人中有11%露宿街头;重新筛查的退伍军人中有40%在六个月后仍无家可归,而有住所的退伍军人这一比例不到20%。露宿街头的退伍军人持续无家可归的可能性是其他人的2.7倍。
露宿街头的退伍军人与有住所的退伍军人不同——他们年龄更大,男性比例更高,收入更低——可能是强化住房干预的合适对象。未来的研究将评估这一人群的临床特征和服务利用情况。