Volume 48 | Number 3 | June 2013

Abstract List

Lydie A. Lebrun‐Harris, Travis P. Baggett, Darlene M. Jenkins, Alek Sripipatana Ph.D., M.P.H., Ravi Sharma Ph.D., A. Seiji Hayashi, Charles A. Daly, Quyen Ngo‐Metzger M.D., M.P.H.


Objective

To examine health status and health care experiences of homeless patients in health centers and to compare them with their nonhomeless counterparts.


Data Sources/Study Setting

Nationally representative data from the 2009 ealth enter atient urvey.


Study Design

Cross‐sectional analyses were limited to adults ( = 2,683). We compared sociodemographic characteristics, health conditions, access to health care, and utilization of services among homeless and nonhomeless patients. We also examined the independent effect of homelessness on health care access and utilization, as well as factors that influenced homeless patients' health care experiences.


Data Collection

Computer‐assisted personal interviews were conducted with health center patients.


Principal Findings

Homeless patients had worse health status—lifetime burden of chronic conditions, mental health problems, and substance use problems—compared with housed respondents. In adjusted analyses, homeless patients had twice the odds as housed patients of having unmet medical care needs in the past year ( = 1.98, 95 percent : 1.24–3.16) and twice the odds of having an visit in the past year ( = 2.00, 95 percent : 1.37–2.92).


Conclusions

There is an ongoing need to focus on the health issues that disproportionately affect homeless populations. Among health center patients, homelessness is an independent risk factor for unmet medical needs and use.