AI Article Synopsis

  • Emergency department patients frequently face homelessness and substance use issues, with social relationships playing a significant but complex role.
  • A qualitative study involving 25 homeless patients who use drugs or alcohol revealed four main themes: the strain of substance use on relationships, the fluctuating availability of social support, the challenges relationships pose to substance use, and the cycle of substance use leading to isolation.
  • The findings suggest that addressing social relationships is crucial in developing effective emergency department interventions for preventing homelessness linked to substance use.

Article Abstract

Emergency department (ED) patients commonly experience both substance use and homelessness, and social relationships impact each in varied ways not fully captured by existing quantitative research. This qualitative study examines how social relationships can precipitate or ameliorate homelessness and the connection (if any) between substance use and social relationships among ED patients experiencing homelessness. As part of a broader study to develop ED-based homelessness prevention interventions, we conducted in-depth interviews with 25 ED patients who used alcohol or drugs and had recently become homeless. We asked patients about the relationship between their substance use and homelessness. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and coded line-by-line by investigators. Final codes formed the basis for thematic analysis through consensus discussions. Social relationships emerged as focal points for understanding the four major themes related to the intersection of homelessness and substance use: (1) Substance use can create strain in relationships; (2) Help is there until it's not; (3) Social relationships can create challenges contributing to substance use; and (4) Reciprocal relationship of substance use and isolation. Sub-themes were also identified and described. The association between substance use and homelessness is multifaceted and social relationships are a complex factor linking the two. Social relationships are often critical for homelessness prevention, but they are impacted by and reciprocally affect substance use. ED-based substance use interventions should consider the high prevalence of homelessness and the impact of social relationships on the interaction between homelessness and substance use.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9213105PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08897077.2021.1975869DOI Listing

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