Home Together: A Multi-Level Community-Based Health Promotion Program Supporting Families Experiencing Homelessness.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved Pub Date : 2024-01-01
Brooke E E Montgomery, Cindy Crone, Ben Goodwin, Ruthie Hokans, Ashley Williams, Jaime Stacker, Rachael Borne', George Pro, Isis Martel
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Abstract

Home Together (HT) is a multi-level multi-component health promotion program, co-led by academic and non-profit partners in Arkansas that sought (1) to improve access to and family acceptance of social services and health care among women experiencing homelessness who have a diagnosed mental health condition and a child younger than six years and (2) to increase service provider capacity to engage with this population. A socioecological perspective was used to detail program components and lessons learned. Home Together enrolled 345 women representing unduplicated families. Of these, 214 completed six-month reassessments and 111 completed discharge assessments. Representative of the area and population served, most self-identified as belonging to racial minorities (87.0%), being younger than 35 years (80.1%), experiencing violence (76%), and being heterosexual (82%). Pre-post testing indicated positive changes for HT families, including improvements in mental health, health care access, and housing. Yet, even the most coordinated comprehensive programs are no substitute for policy-level changes that help families reach stability.

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一起回家:以社区为基础的多层次健康促进计划,为无家可归的家庭提供支持。
共同家园(HT)是一项多层次、多成分的健康促进计划,由阿肯色州的学术界和非营利性合作伙伴共同领导,旨在(1)改善已确诊患有精神疾病且子女小于 6 岁的无家可归妇女获得社会服务和医疗保健的机会,并提高其家庭对这些服务和医疗保健的接受程度;(2)提高服务提供者与该人群打交道的能力。从社会生态学的角度详细介绍了该计划的组成部分和经验教训。共同家园 "计划招募了 345 名妇女,她们代表了不重复的家庭。其中 214 人完成了六个月的重新评估,111 人完成了出院评估。大多数妇女自我认同属于少数种族(87.0%)、年龄小于 35 岁(80.1%)、遭受过暴力(76%)和异性恋(82%),这在所服务的地区和人群中具有代表性。事后测试表明,HT 家庭发生了积极的变化,包括心理健康、医疗保健和住房方面的改善。然而,即使是协调性最强的综合计划,也无法替代帮助家庭实现稳定的政策层面的变化。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
154
期刊介绍: The journal has as its goal the dissemination of information on the health of, and health care for, low income and other medically underserved communities to health care practitioners, policy makers, and community leaders who are in a position to effect meaningful change. Issues dealt with include access to, quality of, and cost of health care.
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