Co-occurring homelessness, justice involvement, opioid dependence and psychosis: a cross-sectoral data linkage study

Author:

Tweed Emily J1ORCID,Leyland Alastair H1ORCID,Morrison David S2,Katikireddi S Vittal1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow , Glasgow, UK

2. Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow , Glasgow, UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAdministrative data offer unique opportunities for researching experiences which pose barriers to participation in primary research and household surveys. Experiencing multiple social disadvantages is associated with very poor health outcomes, but little is known about how often this occurs and what combinations are most common. We linked administrative data across public services to create a novel population cohort containing information on experiences of homelessness, justice involvement, opioid dependence and psychosis.MethodsWe securely linked administrative data from (i) a population register derived from general practitioner registrations; (ii) local authority homelessness applications; (iii) prison records; (iv) criminal justice social work reports; (v) community dispensing for opioid substitution therapy; and (vi) a psychosis clinical register, for people aged ≥18 years resident in Glasgow, Scotland between 01 April 2010 and 31 March 2014. We estimated period prevalence and compared demographic characteristics for different combinations.ResultsOf 536 653 individuals in the cohort, 28 112 (5.2%) had at least one of the experiences of interest during the study period and 5178 (1.0%) had more than one. Prevalence of individual experiences varied from 2.4% (homelessness) to 0.7% (psychosis). The proportion of people with multiple co-occurring experiences was highest for imprisonment (50%) and lowest for psychosis (14%). Most combinations showed a predominance of men living in the most deprived areas of Scotland.ConclusionsCross-sectoral record linkage to study multiple forms of social disadvantage showed that co-occurrence of these experiences was relatively common. Following this demonstration of feasibility, these methods offer opportunities for evaluating the health impacts of policy and service change.

Funder

Chief Scientist Office

Medical Research Council

Chief Scientist Office Clinical Academic Fellowship

NHS Research Scotland

Scottish Senior Clinical Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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