Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
B. Wallace, Katrina Barber, B. Pauly (2018)
Sheltering risks: Implementation of harm reduction in homeless shelters during an overdose emergency.The International journal on drug policy, 53
D. Culhane, Stephen Metraux (2008)
Rearranging the Deck Chairs or Reallocating the Lifeboats? Homelessness Assistance and Its AlternativesJournal of the American Planning Association, 74
A. Crabtree, N. Latham, Robert Morgan, B. Pauly, V. Bungay, J. Buxton (2018)
Perceived harms and harm reduction strategies among people who drink non-beverage alcohol: Community-based qualitative research in Vancouver, Canada.The International journal on drug policy, 59
S. Fazel, J. Geddes, M. Kushel (2014)
The health of homeless people in high-income countries: descriptive epidemiology, health consequences, and clinical and policy recommendationsThe Lancet, 384
Michele Lancione, A. Stefanizzi, M. Gaboardi (2018)
Passive adaptation or active engagement? The challenges of Housing First internationally and in the Italian caseHousing Studies, 33
T. Baker, Joshua Evans (2016)
'Housing first' and the changing terrains of homeless governanceGeography Compass, 10
J. Sayers (2001)
The world health report 2001 - Mental health: new understanding, new hopeBulletin of The World Health Organization, 79
N. Pleace (2018)
Using Housing First in Integrated Homelessness Strategies : A Review of the Evidence
S. Johnsen, Lígia Teixeira (2012)
‘Doing it Already?’: Stakeholder Perceptions of Housing First in the UKInternational Journal of Housing Policy, 12
P. Goering, D. Streiner, C. Adair, T. Aubry, J. Barker, J. Distasio, Stephen Hwang, Janina Komaroff, E. Latimer, J. Somers, D. Zabkiewicz (2011)
The At Home/Chez Soi trial protocol: a pragmatic, multi-site, randomised controlled trial of a Housing First intervention for homeless individuals with mental illness in five Canadian citiesBMJ Open, 1
(2010)
Housing needs and preferences of relatively homeless aboriginal women with addiction
Evelyne Dyb (2016)
Housing First or no housing? Housing and homelessness at the end of alcohol and drug treatment.The International journal on drug policy, 36
T. Stockwell, Nichole Williams, B. Pauly (2012)
Working and waiting: homeless drinkers' responses to less affordable alcohol.Drug and alcohol review, 31 6
K. Vallance, T. Stockwell, B. Pauly, C. Chow, E. Gray, Bonnie Krysowaty, K. Perkin, Jinhui Zhao (2016)
Do managed alcohol programs change patterns of alcohol consumption and reduce related harm? A pilot studyHarm Reduction Journal, 13
(2018)
Radical harm reduction: coming out from under the radar
B. Pauly, E. Gray, K. Perkin, C. Chow, K. Vallance, Bonnie Krysowaty, T. Stockwell (2016)
Finding safety: a pilot study of managed alcohol program participants’ perceptions of housing and quality of lifeHarm Reduction Journal, 13
(2015)
Fact sheet: alcohol
(2018)
Rethinking alcohol harm reduction: overview of managed alcohol programs (MAPs) in Canada
R. Schiff, Jeannette Schiff, B. Schneider (2010)
Housing for the Disabled Mentally Ill: Moving beyond HomogeneityCanadian Journal of Urban Research, 19
N. Pleace, Joanne Bretherton (2017)
What Do We Mean by Housing First
V. Grazioli, Jennifer Hicks, Greta Kaese, James Lenert, S. Collins (2015)
Safer-drinking strategies used by chronically homeless individuals with alcohol dependence.Journal of substance abuse treatment, 54
B. Pauly, Dan Reist, L. Belle-Isle, Chuck Schactman (2013)
Housing and harm reduction: what is the role of harm reduction in addressing homelessness?The International journal on drug policy, 24 4
(2013)
The case for Housing First in the European Union: a critical evaluation of concerns about effectiveness
J. Rehm, C. Mathers, S. Popova, M. Thavorncharoensap, Y. Teerawattananon, Jayadeep Patra (2009)
Global burden of disease and injury and economic cost attributable to alcohol use and alcohol-use disordersThe Lancet, 373
J. Woodhall-Melnik, J. Dunn (2016)
A systematic review of outcomes associated with participation in Housing First programsHousing Studies, 31
Andrea Cordell, I. Thompson (2019)
Maslow’s Hierarchy of NeedsEncyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences
S. Tsemberis, L. Gulcur, M. Nakae (2004)
Housing First, consumer choice, and harm reduction for homeless individuals with a dual diagnosis.American journal of public health, 94 4
Amy Katz, Suzanne Zerger, Stephen Hwang (2017)
Housing First the conversation: discourse, policy and the limits of the possibleCritical Public Health, 27
S. Kertesz, K. Crouch, J. Milby, Robert Cusimano, J. Schumacher (2009)
Housing First for Homeless Persons with Active Addiction: Are We Overreaching?Poverty
T. Stockwell, B. Pauly, C. Chow, Rebekah Erickson, Bonnie Krysowaty, Audra Roemer, K. Vallance, A. Wettlaufer, Jinhui Zhao (2018)
Does managing the consumption of people with severe alcohol dependence reduce harm? A comparison of participants in six Canadian managed alcohol programs with locally recruited controlsDrug and Alcohol Review, 37
(2017)
Turning a blind eye: implementation of harm reduction in transitional shelter settings
K. Hammond, L. Gagne, B. Pauly, T. Stockwell (2016)
A cost-benefit analysis of a Canadian managed alcohol program
A. Baxter, E. Tweed, S. Katikireddi, H. Thomson (2019)
Effects of Housing First approaches on health and well-being of adults who are homeless or at risk of homelessness: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trialsJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 73
T. Stockwell, P. Butt, D. Beirness, L. Gliksman, C. Paradis (2012)
The basis for Canada's new low-risk drinking guidelines: a relative risk approach to estimating hazardous levels and patterns of alcohol use.Drug and alcohol review, 31 2
Jeannette Schiff, R. Schiff (2014)
Housing first: paradigm or program?Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, 23
M. Sobell, L. Sobell (1973)
Individualized behavior therapy for alcoholicsBehavior Therapy, 4
L. Polvere, T. MacLeod, E. Macnaughton, R. Caplan, M. Piat, G. Nelson, S. Gaetz, P. Goering (2014)
Canadian Housing First toolkit: the At Home/Chez Soi experience
S. Collins, Daniel Malone, M. Larimer (2012)
Motivation to change and treatment attendance as predictors of alcohol-use outcomes among project-based Housing First residents.Addictive behaviors, 37 8
Salenger Incorporated, 14
B. Pauly (2008)
Harm reduction through a social justice lens.The International journal on drug policy, 19 1
G. Marlatt, K. Witkiewitz (2002)
Harm reduction approaches to alcohol use: health promotion, prevention, and treatment.Addictive behaviors, 27 6
Joshua Mandelberg, Robert Kuhn, Robert Kuhn, M. Kohn, M. Kohn (2000)
Epidemiologic analysis of an urban, public emergency department's frequent users.Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, 7 6
Rebekah Erickson, T. Stockwell, B. Pauly, C. Chow, Audra Roemer, Jinhui Zhao, K. Vallance, A. Wettlaufer (2018)
How do people with homelessness and alcohol dependence cope when alcohol is unaffordable? A comparison of residents of Canadian managed alcohol programs and locally recruited controlsDrug and Alcohol Review, 37
L. Gulcur, A. Stefancic, M. Shinn, S. Tsemberis, S. Fischer (2003)
Housing, hospitalization, and cost outcomes for homeless individuals with psychiatric disabilities participating in continuum of care and housing first programmesJournal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 13
L. Sobell, M. Sobell, G. Leo, S. Agrawal, Lisa Johnson-Young, J. Cunningham (2002)
Promoting self-change with alcohol abusers: a community-level mail intervention based on natural recovery studies.Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, 26 6
M. Liebrenz, M. Schneider, A. Buadze, Marie-Therese Gehring, Anish Dube, C. Caflisch (2016)
Attitudes towards a maintenance (-agonist) treatment approach in high-dose benzodiazepine-dependent patients: a qualitative studyHarm Reduction Journal, 13
(2018)
Canadian substance use costs and harms (2007–2014)
Recently, Managed Alcohol Programs (MAPs have emerged as an alcohol harm reduction model for those living with severe alcohol use disorder (AUD) and experiencing homelessness. There is still a lack of clarity about the role of these programs in relation to Housing First (HF) discourse. The authors examine the role of MAPs within a policy environment that has become dominated by a focus on HF approaches to addressing homelessness. This examination includes a focus on Canadian policy contexts where MAPs originated and are still predominately located. The purpose of this paper is to trace the development of MAPs as a novel response to homelessness among people experiencing severe AUD and to describe the place of MAPs within a HF context.Design/methodology/approachThis conceptual paper outlines the development of discourses related to persons experiencing severe AUD and homelessness, with a focus on HF and MAPs as responses to these challenges. The authors compare the key characteristics of MAPs with “core principles” and values as outlined in various definitions of HF.FindingsMAPs incorporate many of the core values or principles of HF as outlined in some definitions, although not all. MAPs (and other housing/treatment models) provide critical housing and support services for populations who might not fit well with or who might not prefer HF models.Originality/valueThe “silver bullet” discourse surrounding HF (and harm reduction) can obscure the importance of programs (such as MAPs) that do not fully align with all HF principles and program models. This is despite the fact that MAPs (and other models) provide critical housing and support services for populations who might fall between the cracks of HF models. There is the potential for MAPs to help fill a gap in the application of harm reduction in HF programs. The authors also suggest a need to move beyond HF discourse, to embrace complexity and move toward examining what mixture of different housing and harm reduction supports are needed to provide a complete or comprehensive array of services and supports for people who use substances and are experiencing homelessness.
Housing Care and Support – Emerald Publishing
Published: Nov 5, 2019
Keywords: Harm reduction; Housing first; Homelessness; Housing; Managed alcohol programs; Severe alcohol use disorder
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.