TY - JOUR
T1 - Food insecurity among formerly homeless youth in supportive housing
T2 - A social-ecological analysis of a structural intervention
AU - Brothers, Sarah
AU - Lin, Jess
AU - Schonberg, Jeffrey
AU - Drew, Corey
AU - Auerswald, Colette
N1 - Funding Information:
We have previously presented aspects of this work at the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine and the American Public Health Association annual meetings. Our study would not have been possible without our research staff, students, and volunteers including Andrew Campbell, Taylor Cuffaro, Deborah Karasek, Erika Molina, and Janelle Silvis. We are also grateful to the support and collaboration of the building staff. This research was supported by a grants and financial support from the Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholars Program, the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, and the AE Bennett Fund. Our greatest debt of gratitude goes to our participants, who welcomed us to their home and trusted us with their stories.
Funding Information:
We have previously presented aspects of this work at the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine and the American Public Health Association annual meetings. Our study would not have been possible without our research staff, students, and volunteers including Andrew Campbell, Taylor Cuffaro, Deborah Karasek, Erika Molina, and Janelle Silvis. We are also grateful to the support and collaboration of the building staff. This research was supported by a grants and financial support from the Robert Wood Johnson Health and Society Scholars Program , the UC Berkeley School of Public Health , and the AE Bennett Fund . Our greatest debt of gratitude goes to our participants, who welcomed us to their home and trusted us with their stories.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/1
Y1 - 2020/1
N2 - A growing body of research indicates that structural interventions to provide permanent supportive housing (PSH) to homeless adults within a Housing First approach can improve their health. However, research is lacking regarding the impact of PSH on youth experiencing homelessness. This article seeks to understand how PSH for youth impacts a basic health need—food security— across multiple levels of the social-ecological environment. In January of 2014, San Francisco, California opened the city's first municipally-funded PSH building exclusively designated for transition-aged youth (ages 18–24). We conducted 20 months of participant observation and in-depth interviews with 39 youth from April 2014 to December 2015. Ethnographic fieldnotes and interview transcripts were analyzed using grounded theory. We present our social-ecological assessment regarding food insecurity for formerly homeless youth in supportive housing. We found that although housing removes some major sources of food insecurity from their lives, it adds others. Many of the participating youth were frequently hungry and went without food for entire days. Mechanisms across multiple levels of the social-ecological model contribute to food insecurity. Mechanisms on the structural level include stigma, neighborhood food resources, and monthly hunger cycles. Mechanisms on the institutional level include the transition into housing and housing policies regarding kitchen use and food storage. Interpersonal level mechanisms include food sharing within social networks. Individual level mechanisms include limited cooking skills, equipment, and coping strategies to manage hunger. Although supportive housing provides shelter to youth, effective implementation of the Housing First/PSH model for youth must ensure their access to an affordable nutritious diet.
AB - A growing body of research indicates that structural interventions to provide permanent supportive housing (PSH) to homeless adults within a Housing First approach can improve their health. However, research is lacking regarding the impact of PSH on youth experiencing homelessness. This article seeks to understand how PSH for youth impacts a basic health need—food security— across multiple levels of the social-ecological environment. In January of 2014, San Francisco, California opened the city's first municipally-funded PSH building exclusively designated for transition-aged youth (ages 18–24). We conducted 20 months of participant observation and in-depth interviews with 39 youth from April 2014 to December 2015. Ethnographic fieldnotes and interview transcripts were analyzed using grounded theory. We present our social-ecological assessment regarding food insecurity for formerly homeless youth in supportive housing. We found that although housing removes some major sources of food insecurity from their lives, it adds others. Many of the participating youth were frequently hungry and went without food for entire days. Mechanisms across multiple levels of the social-ecological model contribute to food insecurity. Mechanisms on the structural level include stigma, neighborhood food resources, and monthly hunger cycles. Mechanisms on the institutional level include the transition into housing and housing policies regarding kitchen use and food storage. Interpersonal level mechanisms include food sharing within social networks. Individual level mechanisms include limited cooking skills, equipment, and coping strategies to manage hunger. Although supportive housing provides shelter to youth, effective implementation of the Housing First/PSH model for youth must ensure their access to an affordable nutritious diet.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112724
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112724
M3 - Article
C2 - 31838336
AN - SCOPUS:85076162216
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 245
JO - Ethics in Science and Medicine
JF - Ethics in Science and Medicine
M1 - 112724
ER -