Objective: To determine whether two Housing First configurations (scattered site [SS] versus
congregated site [CS]) are associated with different health-related outcomes.
Methods: This ecological study employed a longitudinal, quantitative design to compare the
outcomes from 63 individuals (SS: n=37; CS: n=26) in Sydney, Australia, over 12 months.
Results: Both configurations showed similar improvements in quality of life and psychological
distress. While recent use of substances remained stable across the two configurations over
time, a marginally greater increase in the proportion of CS individuals injecting more than
weekly was found. For health service utilisation, CS participants had notably higher service
utilisation rates for mental health specialists and the emergency department for mental health
reasons at follow-up than SS participants.
Conclusion: Preliminary evidence of differential injecting and health service utilisation
outcomes between configurations emerged within this small-scale study over the 12-month
period.
Implications for public health: Given the rapid expansion of both SS and CS Housing First
configurations across Western countries and the indications from this initial study that
outcomes may differ according to configuration, there remains a need for robust evaluative
evidence on the efficacy of various supported housing models on long-term individual
outcomes.