TY - JOUR
T1 - Rural houselessness among people who use drugs in the United States
T2 - Results from the National Rural Opioid Initiative
AU - Ballard, April M.
AU - Kesich, Zora
AU - Crane, Heidi M.
AU - Feinberg, Judith
AU - Friedmann, Peter D.
AU - Go, Vivian F.
AU - Jenkins, Wiley D.
AU - Korthuis, P. Todd
AU - Miller, William C.
AU - Pho, Mai T.
AU - Seal, David W.
AU - Smith, Gordon S.
AU - Stopka, Thomas J.
AU - Westergaard, Ryan P.
AU - Zule, William A.
AU - Young, April M.
AU - Cooper, Hannah LF
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - Background: Over the last two decades, houselessness and drug-related epidemics both have expanded from urban to rural regions across the United States (US). However, our understanding of the relationship between rural houselessness, drug use, and drug-related harms has not kept pace. The current study addresses this gap by describing houselessness among a large cohort of people who use drugs (PWUD) from rural communities across 10 states. Design: PWUD were recruited using modified chain-referral sampling for a cross-sectional survey capturing houselessness in the prior six months, drug use, drug-related harms, stigma, health service access, and sociodemographic characteristics. Using bivariate logistic regressions, we assessed associations between houselessness and participant characteristics. We also compare site-specific houselessness prevalence to Housing and Urban Development Point-in-Time (PIT) estimates, which are based on counts of sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing houselessness on a single night. Results: Among 3000 PWUD, 53.7 % reported experiencing houselessness. Houselessness was associated with multiple drug-related behaviors that increase the risk of overdose and acquisition of bloodborne infections. Houselessness prevalence was comparable and exceeded PIT estimates for several sites, even though study participants constituted <1 % of each site's adult population and were restricted to PWUD. Conclusions: Our findings highlight that houselessness – historically considered an urban issue – is a significant public health concern for PWUD in rural areas. This demonstrates that addressing drug-related HIV, hepatitis C, and overdose epidemics, among others, in the rural US will require the provision of stable housing and harm reduction services as a pathway to treatment and recovery.
AB - Background: Over the last two decades, houselessness and drug-related epidemics both have expanded from urban to rural regions across the United States (US). However, our understanding of the relationship between rural houselessness, drug use, and drug-related harms has not kept pace. The current study addresses this gap by describing houselessness among a large cohort of people who use drugs (PWUD) from rural communities across 10 states. Design: PWUD were recruited using modified chain-referral sampling for a cross-sectional survey capturing houselessness in the prior six months, drug use, drug-related harms, stigma, health service access, and sociodemographic characteristics. Using bivariate logistic regressions, we assessed associations between houselessness and participant characteristics. We also compare site-specific houselessness prevalence to Housing and Urban Development Point-in-Time (PIT) estimates, which are based on counts of sheltered and unsheltered people experiencing houselessness on a single night. Results: Among 3000 PWUD, 53.7 % reported experiencing houselessness. Houselessness was associated with multiple drug-related behaviors that increase the risk of overdose and acquisition of bloodborne infections. Houselessness prevalence was comparable and exceeded PIT estimates for several sites, even though study participants constituted <1 % of each site's adult population and were restricted to PWUD. Conclusions: Our findings highlight that houselessness – historically considered an urban issue – is a significant public health concern for PWUD in rural areas. This demonstrates that addressing drug-related HIV, hepatitis C, and overdose epidemics, among others, in the rural US will require the provision of stable housing and harm reduction services as a pathway to treatment and recovery.
KW - Harm reduction
KW - Houselessness
KW - Rural areas
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U2 - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.112498
DO - 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.112498
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85209756670
SN - 0376-8716
VL - 266
JO - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
JF - Drug and Alcohol Dependence
M1 - 112498
ER -