DiGuiseppi Graham, Jose Rupa, D'Amico Elizabeth J, Klein David J, Rodriguez Anthony, Pedersen Eric R, Tucker Joan S
RAND Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California, USA.
Perspect Sex Reprod Health. 2025 Jul 29. doi: 10.1111/psrh.70028.
Young adults experiencing homelessness (YAEH) have higher rates of pregnancy than stably housed young adults. Pregnant and parenting YAEH face several challenges, but little is known about outcome change over time.
276 YAEH (aged 18-25, 28% female sex at birth) receiving services at drop-in centers in Los Angeles, California, participated in an intervention study to address substance use and sexual health. At each survey, participants reported whether they experienced pregnancy or got someone pregnant in the past 3 months. Regression models examined associations between pregnancy and several outcomes at 24 months (education, employment, income, health, substance use, service use, and housing), controlling for intervention and outcomes at baseline.
Fifty-six participants (20%, n = 26 female sex, n = 30 male sex) reported being pregnant or getting someone pregnant over the course of the study. For women, pregnancy was associated with higher odds of staying in transitional housing (OR = 5.01, 95% CI: 1.22-20.60) and emergency shelters (OR = 8.32, 95% CI: 1.57-44.02) at 24 months, controlling for baseline. For men, getting someone pregnant was associated with greater importance of cutting down alcohol use (b = 2.06, SE = 0.89, p = 0.02) and higher odds of education service use at 24 months (OR = 3.00, 95% CI: 1.16-7.79).
Pregnancy may be associated with greater use of housing services among female YAEH, and increased importance of cutting down alcohol and use of education services among male YAEH. Continued support is needed to improve long-term outcomes of pregnant and parenting YAEH.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03735784. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT03735784.
无家可归的年轻人(YAEH)的怀孕率高于有稳定住所的年轻人。怀孕和育儿的YAEH面临着诸多挑战,但对于随着时间推移结果的变化却知之甚少。
276名年龄在18至25岁之间(出生时女性占28%)、在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶的救助中心接受服务的YAEH参与了一项旨在解决药物使用和性健康问题的干预研究。在每次调查中,参与者报告他们在过去3个月内是否怀孕或使他人怀孕。回归模型检验了怀孕与24个月时的几种结果(教育、就业、收入、健康、药物使用、服务使用和住房)之间的关联,并对基线时的干预措施和结果进行了控制。
56名参与者(20%,n = 26名女性,n = 30名男性)报告在研究过程中怀孕或使他人怀孕。对于女性,在控制基线的情况下,怀孕与24个月时住在过渡性住房(OR = 5.01,95%CI:1.22 - 20.60)和紧急避难所(OR = 8.32,95%CI:1.57 - 44.02)的几率更高有关。对于男性,使他人怀孕与减少饮酒的重要性增加(b = 2.06,SE = 0.89,p = 0.02)以及24个月时使用教育服务的几率更高(OR = 3.00,95%CI:1.16 - 7.79)有关。
怀孕可能与女性YAEH更多地使用住房服务有关,并且与男性YAEH减少饮酒的重要性增加以及使用教育服务有关。需要持续的支持来改善怀孕和育儿的YAEH的长期结果。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT03735784。https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT03735784。