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1 independently associated with postdeployment homelessness.
2  by confounding issues of substance abuse or homelessness.
3 veral factors associated with postdeployment homelessness.
4  health implications for people experiencing homelessness.
5 licies and structural factors that result in homelessness.
6 he most important structural determinant for homelessness.
7 ether the mortality rate was associated with homelessness.
8 ctions in PTSD symptoms and less poverty and homelessness.
9 te the hospitalization costs associated with homelessness.
10 s effective programs and policies to prevent homelessness.
11  persons who are homeless or on the brink of homelessness.
12 k for homelessness based on prior history of homelessness.
13 houses, there are few problems with crime or homelessness.
14 2 for cases and 0.77 for controls; P<0.001), homelessness (3.2% for cases and 1.6% for controls; P=0.
15 tatus remained independently associated with homelessness after adjusting for co-occurring mental hea
16 re no significant differences in the risk of homelessness among diagnostic groups.
17 95% CI, 1.23-1.74), denoting higher risk for homelessness among males with a positive screen for MST.
18                   Although data suggest that homelessness among persons with severe mental disorders
19  a 37% (95% CI=18%-55%) greater reduction in homelessness and a 26% (95% CI=7%-44%) greater improveme
20  104% (95% CI=67%-141%) further reduction in homelessness and a 62% (95% CI=0%-124%) further reductio
21  functioning, and (5) have fewer episodes of homelessness and incarceration.
22                                              Homelessness and mortality were assessed using administr
23                                              Homelessness and poverty are inextricably linked, and su
24 entified using MLVA had even higher rates of homelessness and substance use.
25  standard case management models in reducing homelessness and symptom severity in homeless persons wi
26 the VA have higher rates of substance abuse, homelessness and unemployment than individuals who recei
27 us residence in Tarrant County, a history of homelessness, and a history of visiting or working in ba
28  to changing public policies that perpetuate homelessness, and assist in the development and provisio
29  seroconversion were frequency of injection, homelessness, and history of imprisonment.
30 lowered drug and alcohol use, lower rates of homelessness, and lower social disorganization.
31 on substance dependence, psychotic symptoms, homelessness, and psychosocial outcomes, and few group-b
32 missed appointments, active substance abuse, homelessness, and unemployment are associated with no-sh
33 tus, service connection, prescription copay, homelessness, and VA facility.
34                                              Homelessness annually affects an estimated 2.3 million t
35                                The causes of homelessness are an interaction between individual and s
36                         People challenged by homelessness are living with several losses including th
37 reduce recurrent cycles of incarceration and homelessness are needed to augment behavioral interventi
38 ARR, 1.43 [95% CI, 1.08-1.89]; P = .013) and homelessness (ARR, 1.72 [95% CI, 1.25-2.39]; P = .001).
39 h severe mental illness who were at risk for homelessness: assertive community treatment alone, asser
40  and either current homelessness or risk for homelessness based on prior history of homelessness.
41 ents had experienced at least one episode of homelessness before or within 24 months of their first p
42 less education, minority status, longer-term homelessness, being sexually assaulted, being arrested,
43                                              Homelessness, birth in the United States and Native Amer
44 as predominantly male, and had high rates of homelessness, cigarette smoking, alcoholism, injection d
45 ations, including people with experiences of homelessness, drug use, imprisonment, and sex work.
46                           Patients reporting homelessness had a completion rate of 81.2% (147/181).
47 rmerly incarcerated people with histories of homelessness had higher rates of drug-related death (RR
48                                              Homelessness has serious implications for the health of
49                                              Homelessness histories were based on subject self-report
50 ith regard to age, sex, race, foreign birth, homelessness, history of incarceration, or prior tubercu
51             Noncompliance with drug therapy, homelessness, immigration to the United States from deve
52 d were done in populations with a history of homelessness, imprisonment, sex work, or substance use d
53      This study reports on the occurrence of homelessness in a quasi-representative sample of persons
54           The authors also compared rates of homelessness in different diagnostic groups and among gr
55 me, and homelessness in US-born patients and homelessness in foreign-born patients.
56 as follows: black ethnicity, low income, and homelessness in US-born patients and homelessness in for
57 ng stability (as determined from episodes of homelessness, incarceration, hospitalization, and reside
58 lack race, lower educational level, poverty, homelessness, incarceration, substance use, binge alcoho
59                                 We show that homelessness, intravenous drug use, and alcohol abuse pr
60                                              Homelessness is associated with substantial excess costs
61                                              Homelessness is believed to be a cause of health problem
62  tuberculosis morbidity in urban areas where homelessness is common and the incidence of tuberculosis
63 .0013), representing the combined effects of homelessness, jail stay, promiscuity, intravenous drug u
64  in deprived areas linked with overcrowding, homelessness, low income, and recent immigration to the
65 younger age, urban residency, alcohol abuse, homelessness, noninjection drug use, and a history of in
66                             The high rate of homelessness observed must be viewed with profound conce
67  African American, with a median duration of homelessness of 30 months.
68 s, such as schizophrenia, and either current homelessness or risk for homelessness based on prior his
69  recently (within the past year) experienced homelessness or unstable housing, and 57.9% (50.5-65.2)
70 uman immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, homelessness, or drug abuse.
71 ith regard to age, sex, race, foreign birth, homelessness, or history of incarceration.
72 e with no recent history of substance abuse, homelessness, or incarceration, was 1.7%.
73     It was cost saving in patients with HIV, homelessness, or substance abuse, but not in others.
74  were characterized by low income (P=0.003), homelessness (P = 0.004), and exposure to lice (P= 0.03)
75 her mortality risk than was the continuously homelessness pattern.
76  for household overcrowding, low income, and homelessness (RR: 1.76 [1.16-2.70]).
77 stralia (three drug and alcohol clinics, one homelessness service, and one needle and syringe program
78 e United States, African-American ethnicity, homelessness, substance abuse, and male sex.
79 at baseline and at one year was predicted by homelessness (t=-2.98, p=0.001, CI -4.74 to -1.21), dura
80 ificantly greater risk of prehospitalization homelessness than those with low symptom levels.
81 ssistance programs for those facing imminent homelessness, there is little evidence of their impact.
82              The per-person cost of averting homelessness through financial assistance is estimated a
83 s with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or homelessness to diagnose or to exclude tuberculosis, and
84  completion rates were associated with being homelessness, using excess alcohol, and having experienc
85 th higher suicide risk, premature mortality, homelessness, violent crime and incarceration.
86              The median lifetime duration of homelessness was 12 months (interquartile range, 5-36 mo
87                                The degree of homelessness was an independent predictor of clustering.
88                                              Homelessness was associated with clustering (odds ratio,
89                                     Previous homelessness was described in 66.6% of participants.
90 ans with a positive screen for MST, rates of homelessness were 1.6% within 30 days, 4.4% within 1 yea
91 ervice characteristics, odds of experiencing homelessness were higher among those who screened positi
92  black race, a history of alcohol abuse, and homelessness were predictors of clustering of low-copy-n
93 radic experiences of brief incarceration and homelessness, whereas the rest had the other 5 patterns,
94 independently associated with postdeployment homelessness, with male veterans at greater risk than fe
95                   Administrative evidence of homelessness within 30 days, 1 year, and 5 years followi

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