Abstract

BackgroundThe twin problems of severe alcohol dependence and homelessness are associated with precarious living and multiple acute, social and chronic harms. While much attention has been focused on harm reduction services for illicit drug use, there has been less attention to harm reduction for this group. Managed alcohol programs (MAPs) are harm reduction interventions that aim to reduce the harms of severe alcohol use, poverty and homelessness. MAPs typically provide accommodation, health and social supports alongside regularly administered sources of beverage alcohol to stabilize drinking patterns and replace use of non-beverage alcohol (NBA).MethodsWe examined impacts of MAPs in reducing harms and risks associated with substance use and homelessness. Using case study methodology, data were collected from five MAPs in five Canadian cities with each program constituting a case. In total, 53 program participants, 4 past participants and 50 program staff were interviewed. We used situational analysis to produce a series of “messy”, “ordered” and “social arenas” maps that provide insight into the social worlds of participants and the impact of MAPs.ResultsPrior to entering a MAP, participants were often in a revolving world of cycling through multiple arenas (health, justice, housing and shelters) where abstinence from alcohol is often required in order to receive assistance. Residents described living in a street-based survival world characterized by criminalization, unmet health needs, stigma and unsafe spaces for drinking and a world punctuated by multiple losses and disconnections. MAPs disrupt these patterns by providing a harm reduction world in which obtaining accommodation and supports are not contingent on sobriety. MAPs represent a new arena that focuses on reducing harms through provision of safer spaces and supply of alcohol, with opportunities for reconnection with family and friends and for Indigenous participants, Indigenous traditions and cultures. Thus, MAPs are safer spaces but also potentially spaces for healing.ConclusionsIn a landscape of limited alcohol harm reduction options, MAPs create a new arena for people experiencing severe alcohol dependence and homelessness. While MAPs reduce precarity for participants, programs themselves remain precarious due to ongoing challenges related to lack of understanding of alcohol harm reduction and insecure program funding.

Highlights

  • Et al Harm Reduction Journal (2019) 16:70. Alcohol dependence has both short- and long-term health and social consequences. These include increased acute harms due to injuries and poisoning caused in part by periods of heavy use, chronic harms such as liver disease, cancer, strokes and gastrointestinal illness associated with long term consumption, and social harms related to housing, finances, relationships, law and the workplace [1,2,3]

  • People experiencing chronic homelessness and severe alcohol dependence often experience poor mental and physical health, premature mortality, violence, have difficulty accessing and sustaining housing, and have limited access to health care resources and programs [6,7,8,9]

  • Managed alcohol programs (MAPs) interventions provide a new arena for those surviving in high-risk environments and precarious circumstances [15] through creation of a new arena composed of harm reduction and safer worlds, providing opportunities for reconnection to family, community and culture

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol dependence has both short- and long-term health and social consequences These include increased acute harms due to injuries and poisoning caused in part by periods of heavy use, chronic harms such as liver disease, cancer, strokes and gastrointestinal illness associated with long term consumption, and social harms related to housing, finances, relationships, law and the workplace [1,2,3]. Heavy episodic alcohol use or binge drinking and consumption of non-beverage alcohol (NBA) further contribute to harms among homeless populations [10, 11]. The twin problems of severe alcohol dependence and homelessness are associated with precarious living and multiple acute, social and chronic harms. MAPs typically provide accommodation, health and social supports alongside regularly administered sources of beverage alcohol to stabilize drinking patterns and replace use of non-beverage alcohol (NBA)

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