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| Drug Use, Housing Access, Stability and HIV Risk Among Low-Income Urban Residents
Research Method: Basic Research
Principal Investigator: Julia Dickson-Gomez, Ph.D., PI, (Medical College of Wisconsin), Jill Owczarzak, Ph.D., Co-PI (Medical College of Wisconsin)
Grant: National Institute on Drug Abuse (DA 024578)
Dates of Study: 2008-2011
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Background
There is a growing recognition among HIV researchers that what are variously called “structural,” “environmental,” or “fundamental social” causes of disease must be more effectively identified and addressed if we are to reduce the transmission of HIV substantially. Structural factors affecting the HIV risk of drug users examined in much research include laws restricting access to sterile injection equipment or laws banning funding for syringe exchange programs. One factor that has been hypothesized to increase HIV risk among drug users but that has received relatively little research attention to date is the effect of housing and drug policies on drug users’ housing status and subsequent HIV risk. While personal characteristics, such as drug use, may not in themselves cause homelessness, they make certain individuals more vulnerable to homelessness given an increasingly competitive housing market. Structural factors determine why pervasive homelessness exists in this historical time, while individual factors explain who is least able to compete for scarce affordable housing. This project will test hypotheses that drug users have less access to federal, state and local housing subsidies and programs than low-income non-drug users, and that housing instability increases drug users’ HIV risk using an instrument developed in an exploratory qualitative study,
Housing Status/Stability and HIV Risk Among Drug Users (R21 DA 018607).
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Project
Goals and Objectives
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To compare low-income drug users’ and low-income non-drug users’ access to housing and social services, and their housing stability over time in the two study towns controlling for personal characteristics. |
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To examine the mediating relationship of housing access between drug use and housing status/stability. |
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To examine the relationship between housing status and HIV risk for drug using and non-drug using low-income residents. |
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To explore differences in program requirements and supportive services offered by different supportive housing programs and their impact on applicants’ access to supportive housing programs, maintenance of housing stability, and drug use and HIV risk behaviors. |
Project Details
Longitudinal surveys will be conducted with a cohort of 300 drug using and 150 non-drug using low-income residents of Hartford and East Hartford at baseline, 6 and 12 months. Low-income residents of the two communities will be recruited through targeted sampling. We will over-recruit 100 residents of supportive housing programs as part of this larger sample by directly recruiting at the agencies that provide supportive housing in order to ensure sufficient sample size. The survey includes detailed measures of housing status and stability, access to housing subsidies, supportive housing, welfare and health benefits, neighborhood characteristics, health and mental health status, drug use and HIV risk behaviors. In addition, we will explore housing access at the neighborhood level (number of rental housing units, vacancy rates, number of supportive and low-income housing, number of shelters) by mapping secondary housing data and modeling housing availability using geospatial analysis. Risk will also be assessed at the neighborhood level by mapping and geospatial modeling of drug related and violent arrests, and locations of abandoned buildings in relation to participants’ residences or, if homeless, the location/s where they most frequently spend the night. In order to explore more fully the differences in philosophy and program requirements of different supportive housing programs as part of aim 4, we will conduct in-depth interviews with service providers in each of the 5 supportive housing programs in the study towns. This exploratory aim will allow us to develop measures and relationships to more fully evaluate different supportive housing programs in a subsequent study.
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Staff
Contact:
Mark Convey, M.A.
Project Director
(860) 278-2044 ext.
247
Project Staff:
Medical College of Wisconsin
Julia Dickson-Gomez, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Jill Owczarzak, Ph.D.
Co-Investigator/ Ethnographer
Timothy McAuliffe, Ph.D.
Co-Investigator
Yvonne Stevenson M.S.
Research Scientist/
Study Coordinator
Leah Przdwiecki
Data Specialist
Razia Azen
Statistician
ICR
Mark Convey, M.A.
Research Associate/
Project Director
Margaret R. Weeks, Ph.D.
Co-Investigator
Ellen Cromley, Ph.D.
Medical Geographer
Eduardo Robles
Interviewer/
Community Outreach
Gregory Palmer
Interviewer/
Community Outreach
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Link to Research Methods page
Link to Basic Research Methods page
Links to Other ICR Projects:
Housing Status/Stability and HIV Risk Among Drug Users
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