Residential Trajectories of Street Youth—the Montréal Cohort Study

Country
Canada
Region
North America
Language
English
Year Published
2014
Author
Élise Roy, Marie Robert, Louise Fournier, Éric Vaillancourt, Jill Vandermeerschen, Jean-François Boivin
Organisation
No data
Topics
Education Health Research, data collection and evidence
Summary

This article is published in the Journal of Urban Health. The authors have made a version available to read online.

Little is known about the course of homelessness among youth between the ages of 18 and 25 despite the many characteristics distinguishing them from adolescents and from older street-involved populations. We examined the residential trajectories of homeless young adults in Montréal over a 21-month period and identified determinants of various trajectory profiles. The 365 study participants (79 % men, mean age 21.9 years) were followed for an average of 515 days (range 81–630 days). We assessed housing status with a questionnaire based on the residential follow-back calendar designed by the New Hampshire Dartmouth Research Center. Using latent growth analysis to examine achievement of residential stability over time, we observed three different trajectories: group 1 presented a low probability of housing throughout the entire study period; group 2 showed a high probability of early and stable housing; group 3 displayed a fluctuating pattern. Protective correlates of residential stability included high school education, birth in Canada, and presence of mental health problems. Drug abuse or dependence was associated with a decreased probability of housing.

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