260 likes | 417 Views
Examining the Impact of Multifaceted, Short-term Interventions for Homeless Families: Substance Abuse Findings from the CMHS/CSAT Homeless Families Program. Debra J. Rog, PhD Vanderbilt University July 31, 2006. Presentation Overview. Describe the SAMHSA Homeless Families Program
E N D
Examining the Impact of Multifaceted, Short-term Interventions for Homeless Families: Substance Abuse Findings from the CMHS/CSAT Homeless Families Program Debra J. Rog, PhD Vanderbilt University July 31, 2006
Presentation Overview • Describe the SAMHSA Homeless Families Program • Highlight the substance abuse needs of the participating mothers and the outcomes of their participation in the interventions • Discuss the policy implications of the results
Impetus for the Initiative • Families comprise a significant segment of the homeless population • Research indicates a portion of the population has mental health, trauma, and/or substance abuse disorders • Virtual absence of descriptive or empirical research on interventions for homeless families
Structure of the Initiative • Began in October 1999 Phase II (3 years) Phase I (2 years) 8 sites • Conduct Cross-Site Outcome Study • Conduct Site-Specific Studies • Conduct Program Ingredients Study 14 sites • Conduct Site Process Evaluation • Design Cross-Site Study
Cross-site Research Questions • Are comprehensive, intensive, time-limited, multi-site interventions more effective than other treatment alternatives in: • Decreasing psychological distress? • Improving trauma recovery? • Decreasing substance use/abuse? • Improving residential stability? • Improving the general well-being of children? • Improving other outcomes, including health, resources, and parenting?
Are there consistent key dimensions of the interventions that appear to be positively associated with the outcomes? ----------------------------------------------- • What individual-level factors are associated with change? • Are there different identifiable patterns of change among the families on the outcomes?
Nature of the Interventions Basic Intervention Approach Comparison Intervention Approaches • Time limited (up to 9 mos) • Multi-faceted intervention • Mental health treatment • Substance abuse treatment • Trauma recovery • Securing and maintaining housing • Parenting skills • Household and money management • Goal setting • “Treatment as Usual” • Alternative treatment approach
Homeless Families Interventions *Target Primarily SA
Substance Abuse Service Program Emphasis • Measured whether there was: • SA training for staff • designated SA staff • a limited or full array of SA services on site • A 4-level ordinal measure was developed for each: • 0 – None - no services or staff on site • 1 – Low - two or less of the ingredients at limited/low • 2 – Med - having designated staff, training, some level of on -site services • 3 – High - staff, training, full array of services
Study Approaches • Designs • Mix of randomized and non-randomized studies • Family Recruitment/Intervention Site • Shelters were most common site • Other settings include transitional and permanent housing, family health center, residential treatment center
Participant Eligibility Criteria • Families who: • Currently are homeless • Have at least 1 child 1.5 - 16 years old • Have mothers screened to have MH and/or SA issues • 1573 families in cross-site baseline sample • 1467 (93%) with baseline and at least 1 follow-up
Demographics MOTHER CROSS-SITE(n=1572) Average Age 31 years (range 18 - 61) Marital Status Varies by site: 6% - 26% currently married Ethnicity Varies by site Range: 2 - 47% Hispanic/Latina Disproportionately African American (49% - 85% in 6 sites) Education 44% lack HS diploma/GED Employment 96% have a work history 14% working Pregnant 14% currently pregnant
Family Composition • Average of 2-3 total children in families • Currently 1-2 children (under age 18) living with them • 31% of children are under age 5 • 9% of mothers are currently living with a partner
Drug Alcohol & Drug Alcohol Substance Abuse History% reporting ever treated for substance abuse
Illegal Drug Use Alcohol Use to Intoxication AND Illegal Drug Use Alcohol Use to Intoxication % Reporting Current Substance Abuse
Effectiveness of the Target InterventionsKey Outcome Results
Outcome SummaryTreatment vs. Comparison Intervention Results
Summary of Findings • No target intervention effect on the substance abuse outcomes (or other treatment outcomes) • Lack of intervention differences may be due to: • Low contrast between treatment and control interventions • Benefits of even low threshold treatment • Variation of service receipt within groups and confounding of problems and service receipt • Ability to obtain services outside the program • Too short a period of intervention to be effective
Summary of Findings • Encouraging, though tentative evidence for on-site substance abuse services • Poorer outcomes associated with: • Ongoing conflict and trauma • Having children away [trauma and SA outcomes] • Self-report on service receipt (most likely a proxy for severity of the problem) • Having a job is related to more positive outcomes • Trajectory analyses typically one core group is accounting for most of the change on an outcome
Implications of the Findings • Findings suggest that shelter providers and other homeless service providers should: • Screen for substance abuse conditions, among others • Provide on-site or easy access to services in these areas • Actively work with women who are continuing to experience violence to change their life circumstances • Incorporate conflict resolution strategies and interventions to strengthen a women’s ability to avoid relationships that continue to victimize her