Publication | Closed Access
Impact of Supported Housing on Clinical Outcomes
89
Citations
20
References
2007
Year
Family MedicineSubstance UseMental HealthDrug TreatmentSubstance Use DisordersHarm ReductionSocial HealthAddiction MedicineClinical OutcomesPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchHealth SciencesHousingPublic Health InterventionPsychiatryAdult Behavioral HealthAddiction TreatmentOutcomes ResearchHousing AdvocacyPublic HousingMarginal Structural ModelsSupported HousingSubstance AbuseCase ManagementIntensive Case ManagementAffordable HousingTime-varying ConfoundingLong-term CareAddiction Health Service ResearchMedicineHomelessness
In 1992, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) established the HUD-VA Supported Housing (HUD-VASH) Program to provide integrated clinical and housing services to homeless veterans with psychiatric and/or substance abuse disorders at 19 sites. At four sites, 460 subjects were randomly assigned to one of the three groups: (1) HUD-VASH, with both Section 8 vouchers and intensive case management; (2) case management only; and (3) standard VA care. A previous publication found HUD-VASH resulted in superior housing outcomes but yielded no benefits on clinical outcomes. Since many participants missed prescheduled visits during the follow-up period and follow-up rates were quite different across the groups, we reanalyzed these data using multiple imputation statistical methods to account for the missing observations. Significant benefits were found for HUD-VASH in drug and alcohol abuse outcomes that had not previously been identified.
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