A pilot study of the impact of housing first-supported housing for intensive users of medical hospitalization and sobering services.

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A pilot study of the impact of housing first-supported housing for intensive users of medical hospitalization and sobering services.

Am J Public Health. 2013 Feb;103(2):316-21

Authors: Srebnik D, Connor T, Sylla L

Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We examined changes in service use in a Housing First (HF) pilot program for adults who were homeless with medical illnesses and high prior acute-care use relative to a similar comparison group.
METHODS: We used a 1-year pre-post comparison group design. The 29 participants and 31 comparison group members were adults who were homeless with inpatient claims of at least $10 000 or at least 60 sobering "sleep off" center contacts in the prior year.
RESULTS: Participants showed a significantly greater reduction in emergency department and sobering center use relative to the comparison group. At a trend level, participants had greater reductions in hospital admissions and jail bookings. Reductions in estimated costs for participants and comparison group members were $62 504 and $25 925 per person per year-a difference of $36 579, far outweighing program costs of $18 600 per person per year.
CONCLUSIONS: HF participants showed striking reductions in acute-care use relative to the comparison group, demonstrating that HF can be a successful model for people with complex medical conditions and high prior acute-care use. Despite notable methodological limitations, these findings could be used to inform a larger multisite study that would establish greater generalizability.

PMID: 23237150 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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