Realist review of managed alcohol programmes for people experiencing alcohol dependence and homelessness: what works, for whom, and in what circumstances?
Hannah Carver, Emma King, Jessica Greenhalgh, Gillian W. Shorter, Bernie Pauly, Tessa Parkes

TL;DR
This paper reviews managed alcohol programs for people with alcohol dependence and homelessness, exploring what works, for whom, and under what conditions.
Contribution
The study provides a realist review of managed alcohol programs, identifying program theories and contexts for effective implementation.
Findings
Managed alcohol programs can successfully support individuals when they enable autonomy and address clients' needs.
Positive outcomes include improved health and social connections when programs provide regulated alcohol and holistic support.
Programs are most effective in contexts where abstinence-based treatments are unsuitable for homeless individuals with alcohol dependence.
Abstract
People experiencing homelessness and alcohol dependence are vulnerable to a range of harms, and existing treatment options, which are often abstinence-based, are inadequate for this group because they may be unavailable, unsuitable, or not aligned with goals. Abstinence-based treatment programmes also rarely address underlying social and health issues faced by this population. Instead, alcohol harm reduction approaches provide individuals with support to reduce the harms associated with their drinking, without the need to stop drinking. Managed alcohol programmes (MAPs) are one harm reduction approach specifically designed for this group. MAPs provide alcohol in regulated doses through the day, alongside wider support for housing, physical and mental health, welfare, and social connections. A realist review was conducted to explore the current evidence base for MAPs. Realist reviews…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Homelessness and Social Issues · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
