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11-16 May 2014 and beyond. The Goal. To identify the must vulnerable people in inner city Perth To prioritise them for housing, health and other support services based on their assessed vulnerability To assess which level of housing support best matches each individual’s needs. The Process.
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The Goal • To identify the must vulnerable people in inner city Perth • To prioritise them for housing, health and other support services based on their assessed vulnerability • To assess which level of housing support best matches each individual’s needs
The Process 85 surveyors in teams interviewed: • Individuals sleeping rough on Perth inner-city streets between 4am and 6 am on 13th-15th May 2014 • People accessing homelessness services during days and evenings of 13th-15th May (Day Centres, Women’s Refuges, Soup Runs, Nyoongar Patrol, Youth, Mobile GP & Street Dr)
The Survey Tool : VI-SPDAT (Pre-Screen Tool) Recently-released (2013) amalgamation of VI and SPDAT • Both original instruments and the amalgamation are evidence-based, extensively tested, valid and reliable • Vulnerability Index (VI) • Measures chronicity and medical vulnerability • Shows level of risk of dying if not housed • Was used at 2012 Perth Registry Week • Service Prioritisation Decision Assistance Tool (SPDAT) • Identifies best type of support and housing intervention
THE RESPONDENTS • 204 people identified as experiencing primary homelessness • 168 agreed to be surveyed • 127 agreed to photos for identifying them later for housing and support assistance • 79 assessed as needing Permanent Supportive Housing - the most intensive of the intervention options identified by the VI-SPDAT
DEMOGRAPHICS • 41 respondents (24.4%) were under 25 years old • The youngest was 15 years old • 6 (3.6%) respondents were older than 60 years • The oldest was 77 years old
AGE AND GENDER Age Gender • 41 respondents (24.4%) were under 25 years old • The youngest was 15 years old • 6 (3.6%) respondents were older than 60 years • The oldest was 77 years old
Cultural identity Aboriginality Cultural Identity • 11 (26.8% of Youth and 54 (42.5%) of Adults identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander • Total of 65 Aboriginal respondents – 38.7% of homeless people surveyed • 2011 Census: Aboriginal people 3.1% of total WA population
Determining Acuity of Need Pre-Screen total score based on domains of • History of Housing and Homelessness • Risks • Socialisation and Daily Functions • Wellness
Violence, brain Injury and Trauma • 21 of the 60 Adults who had been attacked or beaten since being homeless also said they had a brain injury • No Youth attack victims reported brain injury • 55 Adults said trauma they had not reported had led to homelessness – 17 of these had serious brain injury • 19 Youth had experienced trauma – 3 of these had serious brain injury
Justice System • Multiple recent contacts with police • 80% Youth and 72% Adults had some contact with police over past 6 months • Pending legal issues (“Legal Stuff”) that may lead to fines or incarceration • Previous detention (Watch House, youth detention, prison)
Unequal Representation • 13% of ATSI respondents had 20 or more contacts with police in past 6 months • 76% have been to prison • 76% in the watch house • 54% in youth detention • 48% awaiting outcome of “Legal Stuff”
Frequent Users of Acute Services • Mandelberg et all (2000): a small number of vulnerable people account for a large percentage of Accident and Emergency visits
An Expensive Way to Receive Treatment • Average cost per A & E attendance is $642.00 • Those 48 users would have cost $451,968.00 • Average cost of inpatient stays $6245 per day • Average cost of stay in authorised mental health unit $1320 per day • Ambulance fees $468 per non-urgent use or $872 per urgent use: 238 trips could range from $111,384.00 - $207,536.00
Use of Health Services TOP 5
What do you need to be safe and well? Perth Registry Week 2014
What Has Been Achieved? Using the VI-SPDAT across Perth Registry Week 2014 we have been able to • Collect a consistent set of information about individuals sleeping rough in Perth inner city • For most, have photographic identification • Understand the acuity of their need • Prioritise and match support to each person’s presenting needs
Immediate Follow Up • Ruah Street to Home in partnership with other agencies are searching for and where possible working with those in greatest need (transient, hard to find): • High VI-SPDAT scores • Pregnant • No income • Over 60 years
Outcomes So Far • 1 woman housed with Department of Housing and linked with support (Street to Home) • 2 young men accommodated through Passages transitional accommodation and linked with support (Street to Home) • 1 young man accommodated in private rental with support (Medicare Local) • 1 young man is linked with Street to Home while awaiting return to family and support in NZ • MCOT are tracking people with highest mental health needs • Mobile GP following up people who are physically vulnerable
Next Steps • Discuss ongoing possibilities for use of VI-SPDAT database to inform effective service delivery • Collective impact approach –involving various Govt Depts, WA Police, local Councils, NFP service providers and the wider community • Develop an ongoing campaign (Registry Week is only a week, homelessness is an ongoing problem)