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Home together: A multi-level community-based health promotion program supporting families experiencing homelessness

Montgomery BE, Crone C, Goodwin B, Hokans R, Williams A, Stacker J, Borne R, Pro G, Martel I
J Health Care Poor Underserved

Home Together (HT) is a multi-level multi-component health promotion program, co-led by academic and non-profit partners in Arkansas that sought (1) to improve access to and family acceptance of social services and health care among women experiencing homelessness who have a diagnosed mental health condition and a child younger than six years and (2) to increase service provider capacity to engage with this population. A socioecological perspective was used to detail program components and lessons learned. Home Together enrolled 345 women representing unduplicated families. Of these, 214 completed six-month reassessments and 111 completed discharge assessments. Representative of the area and population served, most self-identified as belonging to racial minorities (87.0%), being younger than 35 years (80.1%), experiencing violence (76%), and being heterosexual (82%). Pre-post testing indicated positive changes for HT families, including improvements in mental health, health care access, and housing. Yet, even the most coordinated comprehensive programs are no substitute for policy-level changes that help families reach stability.

Montgomery BE, Crone C, Goodwin B, Hokans R, Williams A, Stacker J, Borne R, Pro G, Martel I. Home together: a multi-level community-based health promotion program supporting families experiencing homelessness. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2024;35(3):880-902. PMID: 39129608

Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Social Needs/ SDH
Health & Health Behaviors
Population
Homeless
Social Determinant of Health
Housing Stability
Study design
Other Study Design