1. Homeless Adults' Recovery Experiences in Housing First and Traditional Services Programs in Seven European Countries.
- Author
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Greenwood, Ronni Michelle, Manning, Rachel M., O'Shaughnessy, Branagh R., Vargas‐Moniz, Maria J., Loubière, Sandrine, Spinnewijn, Freek, Lenzi, Michela, Wolf, Judith R., Bokszczanin, Anna, Bernad, Roberto, Källmén, Håkan, Ornelas, José, Jorge‐Monteiro, Maria F., Almas, Inês, Duarte, Teresa, Disperati, Francesca, Gaboardi, Marta, Santinello, Massimo, Vieno, Alessio, and Marques, Rita P.
- Subjects
HOMELESS persons ,CONSUMER preferences ,HOMELESSNESS ,HOUSING ,STREET addresses - Abstract
Highlights: Housing First reports more service user recovery but little is known about how this is achieved.Certain features of homeless services are likely to promote service users' recovery.Housing First service users reported more choice, better housing quality, and more satisfaction.Service features predicted independent housing, psychiatric symptoms, and community integration.Across socio‐political and economic contexts, Housing First predicts greater recovery than traditional services. Across Europe, as governments turn to housing‐led strategies in attempts to reverse rising rates of homelessness, increasing numbers of Housing First (HF) programs are being implemented. As HF programs become more widespread, it is important to understand how service users experience them compared to the more prevalent traditional treatment‐first approach to addressing long‐term homelessness. Although there is a large body of research on service users' experiences of Housing First compared to treatment‐first in North American contexts, comparatively less is known about how these two categories of homeless services are experienced in the European context. In a correlational and cross‐sectional study, part of a larger examination of homelessness in Europe, participants (n = 520) engaged with either HF (n = 245) or traditional services (TS; n = 275) programs in seven countries completed measures of their experiences of services (consumer choice, housing quality, and service satisfaction) and recovery (time in independent housing, psychiatric symptoms, and community integration). Across the seven countries, participants engaged with HF programs reported experiencing more consumer choice, better perceived housing quality, and more satisfaction with services than participants engaged in TS programs. Participants in HF programs also reported a greater proportion of time in independent accommodation, fewer psychiatric symptoms, and more community integration. Varying patterns of association between experiences of services and recovery outcomes were observed. Findings indicate HF consistently predicts greater recovery than TS across diverse sociopolitical and economic contexts. Implications of findings for configurations of homeless services and homeless services policy are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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