Verena Strehlau
University of British Columbia
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Featured researches published by Verena Strehlau.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2011
Iris Torchalla; Verena Strehlau; Kathy Li; Michael Krausz
OBJECTIVE To examine lifetime and current prevalence rates of substance use disorders and the demographic and clinical correlates of current drug dependence in a sample of homeless women. METHODS A cross-sectional study of 196 homeless women in three Canadian cities was done. Each subject was assessed using structured clinical interviews. A multivariate regression model was applied to determine predictors of substance use. RESULTS The mean age of the sample was 35.3 years, 54.4% identified as Aboriginal, 46.4% lived on the street Crack cocaine (58%) was the most common substance used, followed by alcohol (53%), cannabis (41%), and heroin (30%). Overall, 82.4% of the sample had at least one type of current substance use disorder, of which 70.5% had drug dependence and 37.8% had alcohol dependence. 58.3% had concurrent substance use and mental health disorders. 76.7% of those individuals with current alcohol dependence had concurrent drug dependence. Only 24.6% of those who had recovered from alcohol dependence had no current substance use disorder. Multivariate analyses showed that younger age, living on the street, engaging in sex work, and having ever attempted suicide were associated with current drug dependence. CONCLUSION Prevalence rates for alcohol and especially drug dependence were exceptionally high in this sample. Innovative programs need to be developed which are accessible and tailored to meet the needs of this specific population, accounting for high problem severity, polysubstance dependence, and high rates of psychiatric comorbidity.
Child Maltreatment | 2012
Iris Torchalla; Verena Strehlau; Kathy Li; Christian Schuetz; Michael Krausz
This study explored self-reports of five childhood maltreatment (CM) subtypes and their associations with current suicide risk in a sample of 500 homeless persons. Participants completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire and the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview. Individual, unique, and cumulative associations of CM subtypes and subtype combinations with suicide risk (no vs. low vs. moderate/high) were examined. In multivariate analyses, four of the five CM subtypes were associated with suicide risk in individual models, but not in a model that included all CM subtypes. The strongest associations were found for reports of multitype CM involving all five subtypes. Mental disorders and female sex were independently associated with suicide risk. Clinicians working with CM victims should be aware that homeless clients are likely to report multitype maltreatment and should assess a variety of CM experiences. Future studies need to further examine multitype maltreatment and suicidal behaviors in homeless populations with complex conditions.
Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2011
Iris Torchalla; Verena Strehlau; Chizimuzo T.C. Okoli; Kathy Li; Christian Schuetz; Michael Krausz
OBJECTIVE To assess prevalence rates of tobacco use and dependence in a sample of homeless individuals and to investigate trends for demographic and clinical characteristics across different levels of nicotine dependence (nonsmokers vs. lowly dependent smokers vs. highly dependent smokers). METHODS A cross-sectional study of 489 homeless men and women in 3 Canadian cities. Each subject was assessed using structured clinical interviews and the Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND). Cochran-Armitage trend tests were applied to determine unadjusted trends in sociodemographic and clinical variables across levels of nicotine dependence. A generalized logit model was computed to adjust for potential confounding. RESULTS The mean age was 37.9 years; 39.2% of the participants were women. About 80.8% were current smokers; the mean FTND score was 5.0. Although no significant differences were found between nonsmokers and smokers with low nicotine dependence, smokers with high nicotine dependence were only half as likely as nonsmokers to be Aboriginal, were 2.39 times more likely to have ever been incarcerated, and 2.44 times more likely to have current drug dependence. There were significant trends for the use of cocaine, opioids, and alcohol, with nonsmokers having the lowest and highly dependent smokers having the highest rates of using these substances. CONCLUSIONS Available public health smoking cessation treatment opportunities should be made available within health care services for the homeless. There is also a need for developing and implementing tobacco dependence treatment programs, which are accessible and tailored to meet the needs of this specific population, accounting for polysubstance use and concurrent substance dependence and mental health disorders.
American Journal of Community Psychology | 2013
Geoffrey Nelson; Eric Macnaughton; Paula Goering; Michael Dudley; Patricia O’Campo; Michelle Patterson; Myra Piat; Natasha Prévost; Verena Strehlau; Catherine Vallée
This research focused on the relationships between a national team and five project sites across Canada in planning a complex, community intervention for homeless people with mental illness called At Home/Chez Soi, which is based on the Housing First model. The research addressed two questions: (a) what are the challenges in planning? and (b) what factors that helped or hindered moving project planning forward? Using qualitative methods, 149 national, provincial, and local stakeholders participated in key informant or focus group interviews. We found that planning entails not only intervention and research tasks, but also relational processes that occur within an ecology of time, local context, and values. More specifically, the relationships between the national team and the project sites can be conceptualized as a collaborative process in which national and local partners bring different agendas to the planning process and must therefore listen to, negotiate, discuss, and compromise with one another. A collaborative process that involves power-sharing and having project coordinators at each site helped to bridge the differences between these two stakeholder groups, to find common ground, and to accomplish planning tasks within a compressed time frame. While local context and culture pushed towards unique adaptations of Housing First, the principles of the Housing First model provided a foundation for a common approach across sites and interventions. The implications of the findings for future planning and research of multi-site, complex, community interventions are noted.
Journal of Psychiatric Practice | 2012
Verena Strehlau; Iris Torchalla; Li Kathy; Christian G. Schuetz; Michael Krausz
Purpose. This study assessed lifetime and current prevalence rates of mental disorders and concurrent mental and substance use disorders in a sample of homeless women. Current suicide risk and recent health service utilization were also examined in order to understand the complex mental health issues of this population and to inform the development of new treatment strategies that better meet their specific needs. Methods. A cross-sectional survey of 196 adult homeless women in three different Canadian cities was done. Participants were assessed using DSM-IV-based structured clinical interviews. Current diagnoses were compared to available mental health prevalence rates in the Canadian female general population. Results. Current prevalence rates were 63% for any mental disorder, excluding substance use disorders; 17% for depressive episode; 10% for manic episode; 7% for psychotic disorder; 39% for anxiety disorders, 28% for posttraumatic stress disorder; and 19% for obsessive-compulsive disorder; 58% had concurrent substance dependence and mental disorders. Lifetime prevalence rates were notably higher. Current moderate or high suicide risk was found in 22% of the women. Participants used a variety of health services, especially emergency rooms, general practitioners, and walk-in clinics. Conclusion. Prevalence rates of mental disorders among homeless participants were substantially higher than among women from the general Canadian population. The percentage of participants with moderate or high suicide risk and concurrent disorders indicates a high severity of mental health symptomatology. Treatment and housing programs need to be accompanied by multidisciplinary, specialized interventions that account for high rates of complex mental health conditions. (Journal of Psychiatric Practice 2012;18:349–360)
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2014
Iris Torchalla; Verena Strehlau; Kathy Li; Isabelle Aube Linden; François Noël; Michael Krausz
Substance use disorders (SUDs) are highly prevalent in homeless populations, and rates are typically greater among males. Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common co-occurring condition among individuals with SUDs; however, little attention has been directed to examining this comorbidity in homeless populations. Although some studies indicate considerable sex differences among individuals with PTSD, it has also been suggested that sex differences in PTSD rates diminish in populations with severe SUDs. This cross-sectional study investigated SUD-PTSD comorbidity and its associations with indicators of psychosocial functioning in a sample of 500 homeless individuals from Canada. Sex-related patterns of SUD, PTSD, and their comorbidity were also examined. Males and females had similar SUD prevalence rates, but the rates of PTSD and PTSD-SUD comorbidity were higher in females. PTSD and sex were found to have significant main effects on suicidality, psychological distress, somatic symptoms, and incarceration among individuals with SUD. Sex also moderated the association of PTSD with suicide risk and psychological distress. Our results contradict assumptions that sex differences in PTSD rates attenuate in samples with severe SUDs. Organizations providing SUD treatment for homeless people should address PTSD as an integrated part of their services. SUD and integrated treatment programs may benefit from sex-specific components.
Harm Reduction Journal | 2014
Iris Torchalla; Isabelle Aube Linden; Verena Strehlau; Erika K. Neilson; Michael Krausz
BackgroundWomen living in poor and vulnerable neighbourhoods like Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (DTES) face multiple burdens related to the social determinants of health. Many of them struggle with addiction, are involved in the sex trade and experience homelessness and gender-based violence. Such evidence suggests that psychological trauma is also a common experience for these women.MethodsThe purpose of this qualitative study was to explore themes and subjective perspectives of trauma and gender-based violence in women who lived in an impoverished neighbourhood and struggled with substance use during pregnancy and early motherhood. We interviewed 27 individuals accessing harm reduction services for pregnant and postpartum women in Vancouver, Canada.ResultsKey themes that emerged from these women’s narratives highlighted the ubiquity of multiple and continuing forms of adversities and trauma from childhood to adulthood, in a variety of contexts, through a variety of offenders and on multiple levels. Both individual and environmental/structural conditions mutually intensified each other, interfering with a natural resolution of trauma-related symptoms and substance use. Women were also concerned that trauma could be passed on from one generation to the next, yet expressed hesitation when asked about their interest in trauma-specific counselling.ConclusionsIn offering harm reduction services for poor and marginalized women, it is clear that an understanding of trauma must be integrated. It is recommended that service providers integrate trauma-informed care into their programme in order to offer this service in a trusted environment. However, it is also necessary to shift the focus from the individual to include environmental, social, economic and policy interventions on multiple levels and from issues of drug use and reduction of drug-related harms to include issues of gendered vulnerabilities and human rights.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Andrea A. Jones; Fidel Vila-Rodriguez; William J. Panenka; Olga Leonova; Verena Strehlau; Donna J. Lang; Allen E. Thornton; Hubert Wong; Alasdair M. Barr; Ric M. Procyshyn; Geoffrey N. Smith; Tari Buchanan; Mel Krajden; Michael Krausz; Julio S. G. Montaner; G. William MacEwan; David J. Nutt; William G. Honer
Background The Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs (ISCD) assigned quantitative scores for harm to 20 drugs. We hypothesized that a personalized, ISCD-based Composite Harm Score (CHS) would be associated with poor health outcomes in polysubstance users. Methods A prospective community sample (n=293) of adults living in marginal housing was assessed for substance use. The CHS was calculated based on the ISCD index, and the personal substance use characteristics over four weeks. Regression models estimated the association between CHS and physical, psychological, and social health outcomes. Results Polysubstance use was pervasive (95.8%), as was multimorbid illness (median 3, possible range 0–12). The median CHS was 2845 (interquartile range 1865–3977). Adjusting for age and sex, every 1000-unit CHS increase was associated with greater mortality (odds ratio [OR] 1.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07–2.01, p = 0.02), and persistent hepatitis C infection (OR 1.29, 95% CI 1.02–1.67, p = 0.04). The likelihood of substance-induced psychosis increased 1.39-fold (95% CI 1.13–1.67, p = 0.001). The amount spent on drugs increased 1.51-fold (1.40–1.62, p < 0.001) and the odds of having committed a crime increased 1.74-fold (1.46–2.10, p < 0.001). Multimorbid illness increased 1.43-fold (95% CI 1.26–1.63, p < 0.001). Conclusions Greater CHS predicts poorer physical, psychological, and social health, and may be a useful quantitative, personalized measure of risk for drug-related harm.
Mental Health and Substance Use | 2014
Michael Krausz; Sahoo Saddichha; Verena Strehlau; Chris Taplin; Kathy Li; Majid Al-Desouki; Christian Schuetz
The paper allows a better understanding of the role of childhood maltreatment among patients with severe opiate addiction and explores its association with current psychological distress. A cross-sectional survey was carried out on a purposive sample (n = 87) of adult intravenous opiate users participating in the North American Opiate Medication Initiative study – the first of its kind in North America, who responded affirmatively to a question on childhood maltreatment. Each participant was assessed in the areas of childhood maltreatment (Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, Short Form), current post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD Checklist, civilian version; PCL-C), and current psychological distress (Symptom Checklist; SCL-90). 87/125 individuals responded (response rate of 69.6%). Within this subsample, the mean age was 38 years, with women making up 41.4% of the participants of the sample. The prevalence of childhood maltreatment (both abuse and neglect) was 72.9%; of these, 45.9%, 41.2%, and 40% of the ...
PLOS ONE | 2016
Chantelle J. Giesbrecht; Norm O’Rourke; Olga Leonova; Verena Strehlau; Karine Paquet; Fidel Vila-Rodriguez; William J. Panenka; G. William MacEwan; Geoffrey N. Smith; Allen E. Thornton; William G. Honer
Rates of psychopathology are elevated in marginalized and unstably housed persons, underscoring the need for applicable clinical measures for these populations. The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) is a clinical instrument principally developed for use in schizophrenia to identify the presence and severity of psychopathology symptoms. The current study investigates whether a reliable and valid PANSS factor structure emerges in a marginally housed, heterogeneous sample recruited from the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver where substance use disorders and psychiatric illness are pervasive. Participants (n = 270) underwent structured clinical assessments including the PANSS and then were randomly assigned to either exploratory (EFA) or confirmatory factor analytic (CFA) subsamples. EFA pointed to a novel three factor PANSS. This solution was supported by CFA. All retained items (28 out of 30) load significantly upon hypothesized factors and model goodness of fit analyses are in the acceptable to good range. Each of the three first-order factor constructs, labeled Psychosis/Disorganized, Negative Symptoms/Hostility, and Insight/Awareness, contributed significantly to measurement of a higher-order psychopathology construct. Further, the latent structure of this 3-factor solution appears temporally consistent over one-year. This PANSS factor structure appears valid and reliable for use in persons with multimorbidity, including substance use disorders. The structure is somewhat distinct from existing solutions likely due to the unique characteristics of this marginally housed sample.