9 results on '"Wang, Ri"'
Search Results
2. Rapid and Collaborative Population Health Assessment for People Experiencing Homelessness in Toronto: The CARE Program
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Richandi, Graziella El-Khechen, Vila, Alannah, Sarty, Monica, Svoboda, Tomislav, Baral, Stefan, Wang, Ri, Vasa, Priya, Ravestein, Alena, Kaur, Tina, and del Cid Nunez Aaron Orkin, Pablo
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Urban health ,Mental health ,Homelessness ,Risk assessment ,Substance abuse ,Health ,Science and technology - Abstract
THE INNOVATION People experiencing homelessness (PEH) face an elevated burden of chronic and communicable disease, mental health and substance use disorders, and unmet health and support needs. (1-2) Health and [...]
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- 2023
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3. A Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial of Financial Incentives in Case Management for Homeless Adults With Mental Illness.
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Kerman, Nick, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Durbin, Anna, Wang, Ri, Kozloff, Nicole, Hwang, Stephen W., and Stergiopoulos, Vicky
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PEOPLE with mental illness ,MONETARY incentives ,HOMELESS persons ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DUAL diagnosis ,GENERALIZED estimating equations - Abstract
Financial incentives can facilitate behavior change and service engagement in health care settings, but research on their use with adults experiencing homelessness is limited. This study examined the effectiveness of financial incentives in improving service engagement and health outcomes among homeless adults with mental illness in Toronto. The authors of this randomized controlled trial recruited 176 participants receiving brief multidisciplinary case management services for homeless adults with mental illness after hospital discharge. In a 1:1 randomization design, 87 participants received a financial incentive of CAN$20 for every week they remained engaged with the service for up to 6 months. The remaining 89 participants received treatment as usual. The primary outcome was service contact rates for up to 6 months of follow-up. Secondary outcomes included self-reported health status, mental health symptoms, substance use, quality of life, housing stability, acute health service use, and working alliance. Negative binomial regression models, analyses of covariance, generalized estimating equations models, and Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to examine differences between the financial incentive and treatment-as-usual groups across outcomes of interest. No significant differences were found between the financial incentive and treatment-as-usual groups in service contact rates or any of the secondary outcomes examined over the 6-month period. In low-barrier, brief case management programs tailored to the needs of adults experiencing homelessness, financial incentives may not affect service engagement or health outcomes. Further research is needed to identify the effect of financial incentives on engagement in other services, including housing-based interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Tackling exclusion: A pilot mixed method quasi-experimental identity capital intervention for young people exiting homelessness.
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Thulien, Naomi S., Wang, Andrea, Mathewson, Caitlin, Wang, Ri, and Hwang, Stephen W.
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HOMELESSNESS ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,SELF-esteem ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SUPPORTED employment ,SOCIAL marginality - Abstract
Background: Longitudinal studies examining the life trajectories of young people after they have exited homelessness have identified concerns with persistent social and economic exclusion, struggles to shake off identities of homelessness, and housing instability. This pilot study sought to explore the feasibility of improving socioeconomic inclusion outcomes by bolstering identity capital (sense of purpose and control, self-efficacy and self-esteem) among young people who had experienced homelessness. Methods: Nineteen individuals (aged 18–26) who had transitioned out of homelessness within the past three years participated in a six-week, six-session program focused on building identity capital. The study employed a mixed method prospective cohort hybrid design with an intervention group (Group One) and a delayed intervention comparison group (Group Two). Participants were interviewed every three months until nine months post-intervention. Results: None of the youth who began the intervention dropped out of the program, with the exception of one participant who moved across the country and was unable to continue. Immediately after participating in the intervention, Group One had statistically significant improvements (p <.05) and large to very large effect sizes in self-esteem (d = 1.16) and physical community integration (d = 1.79) compared to changes in Group Two over the same period, which had not yet begun the intervention. In the pooled analysis, small to moderate effect sizes in hopelessness, physical community integration, and self-esteem were observed at all post-intervention time points. Notably, at six- and nine-months post-intervention, statistically significant improvements (p <.05) and moderate effect sizes in hopelessness (d = -0.73 and d = -0.60 respectively) and self-esteem (d = 0.71 and d = 0.53 respectively) were observed. Youth shared they appreciated the normalizing (vs. pathologizing) of strategies they needed to learn and spoke of the importance of framing new skills as something one needs "to have a better life" vs. "to get better." Conclusions: These early findings signal that targeting identity capital is feasible and may be a promising approach to incorporate into a more complex intervention that includes housing, education, and employment supports to help youth transition out of homelessness. Future research could build on these findings through a sufficiently powered randomized controlled trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. The Impact of Financial Incentives on Service Engagement Among Adults Experiencing Homelessness and Mental Illness: A Pragmatic Trial Protocol.
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Reid, Nadine, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Hwang, Stephen W., Durbin, Anna, Kozloff, Nicole, Wang, Ri, and Stergiopoulos, Vicky
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INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,MONETARY incentives ,HOMELESSNESS ,MENTAL illness ,HOMELESS persons - Abstract
Background: People experiencing homelessness and mental illness have poorer service engagement and health-related outcomes compared to the general population. Financial incentives have been associated with increased service engagement, but evidence of effectiveness is limited. This protocol evaluates the acceptability and impact of financial incentives on service engagement among adults experiencing homelessness and mental illness in Toronto, Canada. Methods: This study protocol uses a pragmatic field trial design and mixed methods (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03770221). Study participants were recruited from a brief multidisciplinary case management program for adults experiencing homelessness and mental illness following hospital discharge, and were randomly assigned to usual care or a financial incentives arm offering $20 for each week they attended meetings with a program provider. The primary outcome of effectiveness is service engagement, measured by the count of participant-provider health-care contacts over the 6-month period post-randomization. Secondary health, health service use, quality of life, and housing outcomes were measured at baseline and at 6-month follow-up. Quantitative data will be analyzed using descriptive statistics and inferential modeling including Poisson regression and generalized estimating equations. A subset of study participants and other key informants participated in interviews, and program staff in focus groups, to explore experiences with and perspectives regarding financial incentives. Qualitative data will be rigorously coded and thematically analyzed. Conclusions: Findings from this study will contribute high quality evidence to an underdeveloped literature base on the effectiveness and acceptability of financial incentives to improve service engagement and health-related outcomes among adults experiencing homelessness and mental illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Housing Trajectories, Risk Factors, and Resources among Individuals Who Are Homeless or Precariously Housed.
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Aubry, Tim, Agha, Ayda, Mejia-Lancheros, Cilia, Lachaud, James, Wang, Ri, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Palepu, Anita, and Hwang, Stephen W.
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This study identifies time-patterned trajectories of housing stability among homeless and vulnerably housed individuals who participated in a multisite four-year longitudinal study in Canada. Findings show four distinct trajectories for the homeless and vulnerably housed: high levels of sustained housing stability, improving levels over time leading to high levels of housing stability, decreasing levels of housing stability over time, and low levels of housing stability over time. The presence of resources rather than risk factors differentiated the trajectories of participants who achieved housing stability from those who had low levels of housing stability. Participants who had better housing stability were more likely to live in subsidized housing. Findings highlight the need for programs and policies directed at addressing the housing affordability problem through income support strategies and the creation of affordable housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Mental and substance use disorders and food insecurity among homeless adults participating in the At Home/Chez Soi study.
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Lachaud, James, Mejia-Lancheros, Cilia, Wang, Ri, Wiens, Kathryn, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Stergiopoulos, Vicky, Hwang, Stephen W., and O'Campo, Patricia
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FOOD security ,SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,HOMELESS persons ,HOMELESSNESS ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
Background: Few studies have examined how food insecurity changes over time when living with severe mental disorders or substance use disorders. This study identifies food insecurity trajectories of homeless adults participating in a trial of a housing intervention and examines whether receiving the intervention and having specific mental and substance disorders predict food insecurity trajectories. Materials and methods: We studied 520 participants in the Toronto site of the At Home/Chez-Soi project. Food insecurity data were collected at seven times during a follow-up period of up to 5.5 years. Mental and substance use disorders were assessed at baseline. Food insecurity trajectories were identified using group based-trajectory modeling. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine the effects of the intervention and mental and substance use disorders on food insecurity trajectories. Results: Four food insecurity trajectories were identified: persistently high food insecurity, increasing food insecurity, decreasing food insecurity, and consistently low food insecurity. Receiving the intervention was not a predictor of membership in any specific food insecurity trajectory group. Individuals with major depressive episode, mood disorder with psychotic features, substance disorder, and co-occurring disorder (defined as having at least one alcohol or other substance use disorder and at least one non-substance related mental disorder] were more likely to remain in the persistently high food insecurity group than the consistently low food insecurity group. Conclusion: A persistently high level of food insecurity is common among individuals with mental illness who have experienced homelessness, and the presence of certain mental health disorders increases this risk. Mental health services combined with access to resources for basic needs, and re-adaptation training are required to enhance the health and well-being of this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Interactions between Police and Persons Who Experience Homelessness and Mental Illness in Toronto, Canada: Findings from a Prospective Study.
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Kouyoumdjian, Fiona G., Wang, Ri, Mejia-Lancheros, Cilia, Owusu-Bempah, Akwasi, Nisenbaum, Rosane, O'Campo, Patricia, Stergiopoulos, Vicky, and Hwang, Stephen W.
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SOCIAL interaction , *POLICE , *HOMELESS persons , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *CRIME victims - Abstract
Objective: We aimed to describe interactions between police and persons who experience homelessness and serious mental illness and explore whether housing status is associated with police interactions.Method: We conducted a secondary analysis of 2008 to 2013 data from the Toronto, Canada, site of the At Home/Chez Soi study. Using police administrative data, we calculated the number and types of police interactions, the proportion of charges for acts of living and administration of justice, and the proportion of occurrences due to victimization, involuntary psychiatric assessment, and suicidal behavior. Using generalized estimating equations, we estimated the odds of police interaction by housing status.Results: This study included 547 adults with mental illness who were homeless at baseline. In the year prior to randomization, 55.8% of participants interacted with police, while 51.7% and 43.0% interacted with police in Study Years 1 and 2, respectively. Of 2,228 charges against participants, 12.6% were due to acts of living and 21.2% were for administration of justice. Of 518 occurrences, 41.1% were for victimization, 45.6% were for mental health assessment, and 22.2% were for suicidal behavior. The odds of any police interaction during the past 90 days was 47% higher for those who were homeless compared to those who were stably housed (95% CI 1.26 to 1.73).Conclusions: For people who experience homelessness and mental illness in Toronto, Canada, interactions with police are common. The provision of stable housing and changes in policy and practice could decrease harms and increase health benefits associated with police interactions for this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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9. The Effect of Housing First on Housing Stability for People with Mental Illness and Low Intellectual Functioning.
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Durbin, Anna, Lunsky, Yona, Wang, Ri, Nisenbaum, Rosane, Hwang, Stephen W., O'Campo, Patricia, and Stergiopoulos, Vicky
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HOUSING ,HOMELESS persons ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,INTELLIGENCE levels ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
Objective: Housing First (HF) has been linked to increased tenure in housing for homeless people with mental illness, but the effect of HF on housing stability for people with borderline or lower intellectual functioning has not been examined. This study of homeless adults with mental illness in Toronto, Ontario assessed whether the association between housing stability and HF differed for adults with borderline or lower intellectual functioning, compared to adults with above borderline intellectual functioning.Method: This study included 172 homeless adults with mental illness from the Toronto site of the At Home-Chez Soi randomized trial that compared receiving HF relative to treatment as usual. This sample was divided into two intellectual functioning groups: 1) adults with borderline or lower intellectual functioning (IQ < 85, 16%), and 2) adults with above borderline intellectual functioning (IQ ≥ 85, 84%). We compared these groups by modelling the percentage of days stably housed using a linear multivariable generalized estimating equation and included interaction between treatment and intellectual functioning. An interaction between treatment and time was also included.Results: There were no overall differences in housing stability for individuals with borderline or lower intellectual functioning compared to people with higher than borderline intellectual functioning in either the HF or the treatment as usual groups.Conclusion: This study is the first to demonstrate that for homeless adults with mental illness, borderline or lower intellectual functioning did not significantly affect housing stability. This accentuates the need for more research and potentially wider consideration of their inclusion in housing interventions, such as HF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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