(Press-News.org) AURORA, Colo. (April 10, 2023) – Involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness will likely lead to a substantial increase in morbidity and mortality over a 10-year period.
In a study, published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), researchers say practices such as encampment sweeps, bans, move-along-orders and cleanups that forcibly relocate individuals away from essential services will lead to substantial increases in overdose deaths, life threatening infections and hospitalizations.
In coordination with the National Healthcare for Homeless Council, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Foundation of the CDC, a multidisciplinary group of researchers developed a simulation model projecting the long-term health effects of involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness who inject drugs using data from 23 U.S. cities. They used city- and national-level data to closely model what the population looks like in real life including their overdose risk and mortality. They then modeled two scenarios over a 10-year time period: no continual displacement and continual involuntary displacement of this population.
In hundreds of different projections, the model showed no feasible scenario, in any city, where continual involuntary displacement improves health outcomes. Instead, the practice would likely result in a significant increase in morbidity, mortality and a shortened life expectancy, the study said.
“Our research shows that these widespread practices that forcibly displace people are clearly impacting the health of this population, particularly when it comes to increasing their overdose risk, so much so that it actually decreases the life expectancy of the entire population,” says Josh Barocas, MD, associate professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and corresponding author. “Modeling studies like ours give us a sense of whether we’re headed in the right or wrong direction. Our study showed that displacement could directly result in a quarter of deaths of this population. This tell us that this practice is taking us in the wrong direction if we want to solve issues around homelessness and substance use disorders.”
Researchers also found displacement increased overdose deaths, hospitalizations, injection-related infections and hindered access to medications for opioid use disorder along with other detrimental impacts.
“It’s estimated that more than 500,000 people are experiencing homelessness in the U.S., and understanding the toll practices such as camping bans and sweeps take on such a substantial population is critical to emphasizing the need for care and services versus literally being swept aside,” says Barocas. “We hope these results inform future policies that actually mitigate the long-term health consequences in this population before it’s too late.”
About the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
The University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus is a world-class medical destination at the forefront of transformative science, medicine, education and patient care. The campus encompasses the University of Colorado health professional schools, more than 60 centers and institutes, and two nationally ranked independent hospitals - UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital and Children's Hospital Colorado - that treat more than two million adult and pediatric patients each year. Innovative, interconnected and highly collaborative, the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus delivers life-changing treatments, patient care and professional training and conducts world-renowned research fueled by over $690 million in research grants. For more information, visit www.cuanschutz.edu.
END
Study shows involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness may cause significant spikes in mortality, overdoses and hospitalizations
New model suggests encampment sweeps, bans and move-along-orders could contribute to 15-25% of deaths in this population over 10 years
2023-04-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Protein Beclin-1 is a major player in uterine remodeling and the establishment of pregnancy
2023-04-10
Throughout a woman's reproductive life, the endometrium, the mucous membrane lining the uterus, goes through cyclical remodeling. It thickens during the menstrual cycle in preparation for embryo implantation, and it is shed during menstruation when there is no fertilization.
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and collaborating institutions are investigating little-known factors directing uterine remodeling to advance the understanding of this process and provide new insights into fertility-associated gynecological conditions. They report today in the journal Developmental ...
Scientists map gusty winds in a far-off neutron star system
2023-04-10
An accretion disk is a colossal whirlpool of gas and dust that gathers around a black hole or a neutron star like cotton candy as it pulls in material from a nearby star. As the disk spins, it whips up powerful winds that push and pull on the sprawling, rotating plasma. These massive outflows can affect the surroundings of black holes by heating and blowing away the gas and dust around them.
At immense scales, “disk winds” can offer clues to how supermassive black holes shape entire galaxies. Astronomers have observed signs of disk winds in many systems, ...
Health effects of involuntary displacement of homeless individuals who inject drugs
2023-04-10
About The Study: This simulation modeling study of 23 U.S. cities projects that involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness who inject drugs may yield substantial increases in morbidity and mortality over a 10-year period. Involuntary displacement is estimated to worsen overdose and hospitalizations, decrease initiations of medications for opioid use disorder, and contribute to deaths. These findings have implications for the practice of involuntary displacement, as well as policies such as access to housing and supportive services, that could mitigate these harms.
Authors: Joshua A. Barocas, M.D., ...
Bariatric surgery may reverse diabetes complications for people with obesity
2023-04-10
For more than 100 million Americans who are obese, bariatric surgery may reverse complications related to diabetes, including regenerating damaged nerves, a Michigan Medicine study shows.
A research team led by the University of Michigan Health Department of Neurology followed more than 120 patients who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity over two years after the procedure. They found that all metabolic risk factors for developing diabetes, such as high glucose and lipid levels, improved outside of blood pressure and total cholesterol, according to results published in Diabetologia.
Investigators ...
What is it good for? Absolutely one thing. Luna moths use their tails solely for bat evasion
2023-04-10
In a pair of complementary studies, researchers took a close look at Luna moth (Actias luna) tails through the eyes of birds and female moths to test the tails’ role in predation and sexual selection. Scientists have known for about a decade that Luna moths — and other related silkmoths — use their long, trailing tails to misdirect bat attacks.
“They have projections off the back of the hindwing that end in twisted, cupped paddles,” said Juliette Rubin, a doctoral student at the Florida Museum ...
Breaking inert bonds: Multicomponent catalysts pave the way for green chemistry and green carbon science
2023-04-10
The chemical industry has played a significant role in the development of society, but its impact on the environment has become a growing concern. Green chemistry and chemical engineering have opened up possibilities for sustainability through the transformation of renewable feedstocks into environmentally friendly chemicals. However, the inert bonds in molecules such as CO2 and N2 present challenges to their activation and conversion.
Electrochemical conversion provides a promising carbon-neutral route to upgrading green chemical sources with inert bonds to chemicals and fuels under ambient conditions. Multicomponent electrocatalysts have advantages over monocomponent catalysts, ...
New textile unravels warmth-trapping secrets of polar bear fur
2023-04-10
AMHERST, Mass. – Three engineers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst have invented a fabric that concludes the 80-year quest to make a synthetic textile modeled on Polar bear fur. The results, published recently in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, are already being developed into commercially available products.
Polar bears live in some of the harshest conditions on earth, shrugging off Arctic temperatures as low as -50 Fahrenheit. While the bears have many adaptations that allow them to thrive when the temperature plummets, since the 1940s scientists have focused on one in particular: their fur. How, the scientific community ...
Navigating the cosmos with Georgia State’s CHARA Array
2023-04-10
ATLANTA—Plans are underway to add a seventh movable telescope to Georgia State University’s Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy— known as the CHARA Array—that would increase the resolution, or the ability to see small objects, by a factor of three.
Located at Mount Wilson Observatory in Southern California and operated by Georgia State, the new telescope will be connected using fiber optics to transport the starlight, a technique that will serve as a pathfinder ...
BU doc honored by the Association of University Radiologists
2023-04-10
(Boston)— Priscilla J. Slanetz, MD, MPH, professor of radiology at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, was awarded the 2023 Association of Program Directors in Radiology (APDR) Achievement Award at the Association of University Radiologists’ annual meeting. The honor is given for outstanding service to APDR or to someone who has made significant contributions to the advancement of education in radiology.
Slanetz is a practicing breast radiologist at Boston Medical Center specializing in all aspects of breast imaging including screening, diagnostic evaluation and image-guided intervention, providing breast care to Boston’s most vulnerable ...
BU researcher awarded $1.5 million NIH grant
2023-04-10
Boston—Esther Bullitt, PhD, associate professor of pharmacology, physiology & biophysics at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, was awarded $1.5 million from the National Institutes of Health that will go toward the purchase of a cryogenic electron microscope. Additional funds have been pledged by University President Robert A. Brown and Professor and Chair of Pharmacology, Physiology & Biophysics Venetia Zachariou, PhD.
The FEI ThermoFisher Glacios-2 cryo-EM is capable of determining structures at near-atomic resolution. Researchers will use this new instrumentation to study cellular function and dysfunction, and to guide ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New test helps doctors predict a dangerous side effect of cancer treatment
UC Study: Long sentences for juveniles make reentry into society more difficult
Death by feral cat: DNA shows cats to be culprits in killing of native animals
Plant Physiology is Searching for its Next Editor-in-Chief
Clothes dryers and the bottom line: Switching to air drying can save hundreds
New insights into tRNA-derived small RNAs offer hope for digestive tract disease diagnosis and treatment
Emotive marketing for sustainable consumption?
Prostate cancer is not a death knell, study shows
Unveiling the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in endometrial carcinoma
Traditional Chinese medicine unlocks new potential in treating diseases through ferroptosis regulation
MSU study pinpoints the impact of prenatal stress across 27 weeks of pregnancy
Biochemist’s impact on science and students honored
ELF4: A key transcription factor shaping immunity and cancer progression
Updated chronic kidney disease management guidelines recommend SGLT2 inhibitors regardless of diabetes or kidney disease type
New research explores how AI can build trust in knowledge work
Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer’s disease
Inhaled COVID vaccine begins recruitment for phase-2 human trials
What’s in a label? It’s different for boys vs. girls, new study of parents finds
Genes combined with immune response to Epstein-Barr virus increase MS risk
Proximity and prejudice: Gay discrimination in the gig economy
New paper suggests cold temperatures trigger shapeshifting proteins
Reproductive justice–driven pregnancy interventions can improve mental health
Intranasal herpes infection may produce neurobehavioral symptoms, UIC study finds
Developing treatment strategies for an understudied bladder disease
Investigating how decision-making and behavioral control develop
Rutgers researchers revive decades-old pregnancy cohort with modern scientific potential
Rising CO2 likely to speed decrease in ‘space sustainability’
Study: Climate change will reduce the number of satellites that can safely orbit in space
Mysterious phenomenon at center of galaxy could reveal new kind of dark matter
Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware
[Press-News.org] Study shows involuntary displacement of people experiencing homelessness may cause significant spikes in mortality, overdoses and hospitalizationsNew model suggests encampment sweeps, bans and move-along-orders could contribute to 15-25% of deaths in this population over 10 years