A recent paradigm shift in public housing policy is catalyzing one of the largest planned migrations in US history. Public housing agencies are relocating residents of spatially concentrated complexes to voucher- subsidized rental units in the private market that are geographically dispersed. The HOPE VI policy embodies this paradigm shift, and is relocating 200,000 households from concentrated complexes to rental units in target cities. HOPE VI migrants tend to move to safer, less poor, and less drug-involved neighborhoods (though gains are attenuated for alcohol and other drug [AOD] abusers);at the same time, migrants'social networks and social supports decline. Migrants'neighborhood conditions, networks, and supports may evolve for some time: HOPE VI inaugurates a period of serial moves for 50% of migrants. Most migrants are African-American and all are poor. Rates of AOD abuse and HIV risk are high among these residents before they move. At issue in the proposed study is whether and how HOPE VI relocations, and the changes in migrants'neighborhood conditions, networks, and social supports that these relocations create, shape African-American migrants'AOD abuse and HIV risk. The proposed [4]-year study will have a quasi-experimental pre-/post-exposure design with an unexposed comparison group. The exposed group will consist of [180] migrants from 7 Atlanta Housing Authority (AHA) complexes targeted by HOPE VI;the unexposed comparison group will consist of 150 residents of 6 AHA complexes that are not relocating. All participants will be African-American, and we will seek variation in the sample in baseline AOD abuse status in order to study how AOD abuse shapes trends in outcomes of interest. The proposed multilevel longitudinal study, led by a new investigator, will achieve the following aims:
Aim 1 : Characterize trends in residential mobility among HOPE VI migrants during the [4]-year the study period;describe changes in the characteristics of the census tracts where migrants live over time (e.g., poverty rates);and learn how AOD abuse status affects these trends.
Aim 2 : Characterize changes in network and social supports over time in the full sample (N=[330]), and determine how HOPE VI status and AOD abuse status affect these changes.
Aim 3 : Describe trends in AOD abuse, proximal HIV risk factors, [and HIV incidence] over time in the full sample, and learn how these trends relate to HOPE VI status and AOD abuse status (where AOD abuse trends are not the outcome).
Aim 4 : Analyze relationships of changes in the characteristics of the census tracts where participants live (Aim 1), and in their networks and supports (Aim 2), to trends in AOD abuse and proximal HIV risk (Aim 3). This study will build on foundations laid by a NIDA R21 study in which we are (1) creating the [330]-member cohort;(2) initiating data collection;and (3) refining retention methods. Results will advance scientific knowledge in NIDA priority areas on migrations, AOD abuse, and HIV, and on determinants of AOD use and HIV among African-Americans.

Public Health Relevance

The proposed study will contribute to several NIDA priority areas. It will deepen our understanding of the impacts of urban migration on alcohol and other drug (AOD) abuse and HIV transmission, and it will advance scientific knowledge of the determinants of AOD abuse and HIV among African-Americans.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01DA029513-01A1
Application #
8012732
Study Section
Behavioral and Social Science Approaches to Preventing HIV/AIDS Study Section (BSPH)
Program Officer
Deeds, Bethany
Project Start
2010-08-01
Project End
2014-05-31
Budget Start
2010-08-01
Budget End
2011-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$696,513
Indirect Cost
Name
Emory University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
066469933
City
Atlanta
State
GA
Country
United States
Zip Code
30322
Haley, Danielle F; Linton, Sabriya; Luo, Ruiyan et al. (2017) Public Housing Relocations and Relationships of Changes in Neighborhood Disadvantage and Transportation Access to Unmet Need for Medical Care. J Health Care Poor Underserved 28:315-328
Linton, Sabriya L; Cooper, Hannah L F; Luo, Ruiyan et al. (2017) Changing Places and Partners: Associations of Neighborhood Conditions With Sexual Network Turnover Among African American Adults Relocated From Public Housing. Arch Sex Behav 46:925-936
Linton, Sabriya L; Haley, Danielle F; Hunter-Jones, Josalin et al. (2017) Social causation and neighborhood selection underlie associations of neighborhood factors with illicit drug-using social networks and illicit drug use among adults relocated from public housing. Soc Sci Med 185:81-90
Cummings, Janet R; Allen, Lindsay; Ko, Michelle et al. (2016) Changes in healthcare access and utilization among participants in a public housing relocation program in Atlanta, Georgia. Health Place 42:63-68
Linton, Sabriya L; Cooper, Hannah L F; Luo, Ruiyan et al. (2016) People and places: Relocating to neighborhoods with better economic and social conditions is associated with less risky drug/alcohol network characteristics among African American adults in Atlanta, GA. Drug Alcohol Depend 160:30-41
Cooper, Hannah L F; West, Brooke; Linton, Sabriya et al. (2016) Contextual Predictors of Injection Drug Use Among Black Adolescents and Adults in US Metropolitan Areas, 1993-2007. Am J Public Health 106:517-26
Cooper, Hannah L F; Bonney, Loida; Luo, Ruiyan et al. (2016) Public Housing Relocations and Partnership Dynamics in Areas With High Prevalences of Sexually Transmitted Infections. Sex Transm Dis 43:222-30
Cooper, Hannah L F; Linton, Sabriya; Haley, Danielle F et al. (2015) Changes in Exposure to Neighborhood Characteristics are Associated with Sexual Network Characteristics in a Cohort of Adults Relocating from Public Housing. AIDS Behav 19:1016-30
Cooper, Hannah L F; Tempalski, Barbara (2014) Integrating place into research on drug use, drug users' health, and drug policy. Int J Drug Policy 25:503-7
Cooper, Hannah L F; Hunter-Jones, Josalin; Kelley, Mary E et al. (2014) The aftermath of public housing relocations: relationships between changes in local socioeconomic conditions and depressive symptoms in a cohort of adult relocaters. J Urban Health 91:223-41

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