Rapid rehousing of formerly homeless jail and prison inmates

Housing, Care and Support,Volume 20, Issue 4, Page 137-151, December 2017. Purpose The purpose of this paper is to assess the programmatic effectiveness of a post-incarceration support service, Jail In-Reach, to rapidly and permanently re-house newly released offenders with a documented history of homelessness, substance abuse and mental health disorders. Design/methodology/approach Data were obtained from SEARCH Homeless Services using the Adult Texas Recommended Assessment Guidelines survey instrument by the Texas Department of State Health Services. Repeated measures analysis of variance were performed to determine the effects of select predictors on the likelihood of permanent housing, which, for this research, is considered programmatic success. Findings Results indicate clients exhibited decreased risks of self-harm, employment problems, housing instability, co-occurring substance use, and criminal justice involvement as well as increased social support. Over half of the program participants either disappeared from the program or only secured temporary housing. Research limitations/implications This was a small pilot project with limited generalizability. There have been no follow-up studies to examine long term permanent housing success. No data were available as to why participants dropped out of the program. Practical implications Intensive advocacy and support services provided pre- and post-institutional release could provide formerly homeless inmates with co-...
Source: Housing, Care and Support - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: research