Research finds life-changing results for homeless

Co-director of the He Kāinga Oranga Housing and Health Research Programme at the University of Otago and lead researcher Professor Nevil Pierse. Photo: Supplied.

Housing plus support is being shown to bring ongoing benefits for people who have been homeless.

Being supported to find a home and then receiving ongoing specialised support services are the key combination in significantly improving the wellbeing of people who have experienced homelessness, researchers say.

These are the findings of a University of Otago-led study of health, income, and justice outcomes for 387 people in the first five years after they were housed in a Housing First programme.

The results have just been published in the International Journal on Homelessness.

Those in the study were supported into housing between 2014 and 2017 by The People’s Project, based in Hamilton, which focuses on facilitating access to permanent housing and specialist support without preconditions.

The researchers looked at which health, justice, welfare, and other services participants had engaged with over five years.

They used information from the Integrated Data Infrastructure - IDI, a large-scale database containing microdata about people in New Zealand.

The researchers then built a detailed overview of this group’s interactions and outcomes, before and after being housed, looking at indicators of people’s physical and mental health, including justice system interactions, income, and employment.

The information is anonymised so individuals cannot be identified.

Lead researcher Professor Nevil Pierse, the Co-Director of the He Kāinga Oranga Housing and Health Research Programme at the University of Otago, Wellington, says there’s been a dramatic improvement in both the physical and mental health of those housed through The People’s Project.

“In the fifth year after this group of people was first housed, the number of hospitalisations continued to fall significantly, by 44 per cent.

“There were considerable reductions in the number of mental health beds required: mental health inpatient unit bed nights reduced by 63 per cent and mental health residential unit bed nights reduced by 73 per cent.

“Meanwhile, the number of prescriptions filled rose. Together, these results indicated improved management of ongoing conditions, and reduced reliance on emergency or acute services. This is better for individuals’ quality of life and lessens the burden on our health care system.”

There was also a big drop in the number of interactions with Police and court including a 43 per cent reduction in criminal charges. Incomes also grew, as did the number of months people paid tax.

The People’s Project was set up in Hamilton in 2014 as a response to growing visible homelessness in the city. There is a second service in Tauranga.

The People’s Project Hamilton manager Dr Carole McMinn and General Manager Kerry Hawkes, who were both involved in the research, are delighted to see that the exceptional five-year results not only sustained, but also improved upon, earlier two-year results.

“From our experience, we see every day that the Housing First approach works, and that many people’s lives improve over time with consistent specialist support. This research confirms our understanding.," says Kerry.

The research paper, ‘Five year post-housing outcomes for a Housing First cohort in Aotearoa New Zealand’ is published in The International Journal on Homelessness. It is the outcome of a research partnership between The People’s Project, the He Kāinga Oranga Housing and Health Research Programme at the University of Otago, Wellington, and the University of Waikato. Read it here: https://ojs.lib.uwo.ca/index.php/ijoh/article/view/16747

For more details about the results, go to The People’s Project website:
https://www.thepeoplesproject.org.nz/dramatic-and-continuing-improvements-for-people-housed-by-tpp/

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