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Obtaining housing associated with achieving abstinence after detoxification in adults with addiction Tae Woo Park, Christine Maynié-François, Richard Saitz Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health and Boston Medical Center Background • Addiction is common in homeless persons • Approximately half of homeless adults have substance use disorders • Homelessness associated with poor prognosis • Increased morbidity • Increased mortality • High health service use Background • Detoxification often point of entry to addiction treatment for homeless substance users • Impact of housing on achieving abstinence after detoxification is unclear Objective • To study the prospective association between housing and later abstinence in a cohort of adults with substance dependence postdetoxification Hypothesis • Obtaining housing is associated with a greater probability of later abstinence in homeless adults with substance dependence compared to continuous homelessness Data source • Secondary analysis of randomized clinical trial that compared integrated addiction, medical and mental health care with usual separate care • No effect of integrated care on abstinence at 12 months (primary outcome) Study design • Cohort study • Data collected prospectively • Analyses and hypothesis completed after data collected • Study period: 12 months Study population • Adults with alcohol and/or drug dependence (CIDI-SF) and recent heavy alcohol or drug use • Screened at inpatient detoxification unit (74% of the whole RCT population, N = 416) • Exclusion criteria: pregnancy, cognitive impairment, lack of English or Spanish fluency Main independent variable • Housing status (at baseline and 6 months) • Continuously homeless • Homelessness defined as any night on the street or in a shelter in the past 3 months • Continuously housed • Homeless to housed • Housed to homeless Outcomes • 30-day abstinence from heavy drinking, stimulants and opioids at 12 months assessed by the Addiction Severity Index Analysis • Logistic regression model • Adjusted for: ◦ Socio-demographics ◦ Age, sex, race ◦ Physical and mental health measures ◦ SF-12 PCS, PHQ-9 ◦ Addiction characteristics ◦ Both alcohol and drug dependence, ASI drug and alcohol composite scores, past addiction treatment Results Baseline characteristic Age (SD) Total (n=416) 36 (10) Male gender (%) 74 White race (%) 56 Both alcohol and drug dependence (%) 61 Addiction Severity Index – alcohol (SD) 0.45 (0.35) Addiction Severity Index – drug (SD) 0.32 (0.14) PHQ-9 ≥ 10 89 Any addiction treatment past 3 months (%) 62 SF-12 Physical Component Summary (%) 42 (8) Results Housing status (n=350) % Continuously homeless 27 Continuously housed 33 Housed to homeless 6 Homeless to housed 33 Association between housing status and abstinence Housing status (n=338) Odds ratio* 95% CI P-value Continuously homeless (ref) 1.00 N/A N/A Continuously housed 1.26 0.70-2.26 0.44 Housed to homeless 1.41 0.51-3.88 0.51 Homeless to housed 1.85 1.04-3.30 .04 *Adjusted for socio-demographics, physical and mental health measures, and addiction characteristics Conclusion • Among adults with substance dependence undergoing detoxification, those who transitioned from homelessness to being housed were more likely to achieve abstinence 12 months later compared to those continuously homeless Limitations • Examined housing status at only 2 time points • Results may be confounded by unmeasured differences between those who gained housing and those that did not Implications • Provision of housing might improve addiction outcomes in patients with substance dependence leaving detox Acknowledgments NIH/NIAAA R01 AA010870 and NIH/NIDA R01 DA010019, Addiction Health Evaluation And Disease Management (AHEAD) Study, PI Saitz