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Patterns and determinants of public shelter utilization among homeless adults in New York City and Philadelphia

โœ Scribed by Dennis P. Culhane; Randall Kuhn


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
223 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0276-8739

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โœฆ Synopsis


Administrative data on public shelter utilization among homeless adults from New York City (1987City ( -1994) ) and Philadelphia (1991Philadelphia ( -1994) ) are analyzed to identify the relative proportion of shelter users by length of stay and rate of readmission, and to identify the characteristics that predict an exit from shelter. Survival analyses reveal that half of adult shelter users will stay fewer than 45 days over a two-year period (combined stays), and that approximately one half of men and one third of women will experience a readmission within two years of the first admission. Results also document the size and relative resource consumption of a long-term sheltered population, finding that 18.2 percent of New York shelter users stay 180 days or more in their first year, consuming 53.4 percent of the system days for first-time shelter users. Discrete-time logistic hazard regression analyses reveal that, in general, being older, of black race, having a substance abuse or mental health problem, or having a physical disability, significantly reduces the likelihood of exiting shelter. In both cities, people entering shelter in later years are staying longer, although individuals have shorter episodes on subsequent admissions. The implications of this study for the analysis and management of emergency shelter system utilization are discussed.


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Institutional discharges and subsequent
โœ Stephen Metraux; Thomas Byrne; Dennis P. Culhane ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2010 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 112 KB

## Abstract This study empirically examines the link between homelessness and discharges from other institutions. An administrative record match was undertaken to determine rates of discharge from institutional care for 9,247 unaccompanied adult shelter users in New York City. Cluster analysis and