Cohort Profile: The Assessing Economic Transitions (ASSET) Study—A Community-Based Mixed-Methods Study of Economic Engagement among Inner-City Residents
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Cohort Description
2.1. Cohort Setting
2.2. Objectives and Study Design
2.3. Eligibility and Recruitment
2.4. Data Collection and Follow-Up
3. Study Measures
3.1. Survey Measures
3.2. Qualitative Concepts
3.3. Statistical Analyses
4. Findings to Date
4.1. Recruitment and Retention
4.2. Cohort Characteristics
4.3. Substance Use, Health, and Well-Being
4.4. Economic Engagement
5. Discussion
Future Plans
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
BL | FUP | EXIT | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Demographics & Background | ||||
A1 | Age | x | ||
A1 | Ethnicity | x | ||
A2 | Gender identity | x | ||
A3 | Relationship status | x | x | x |
A4 | Immigration (place of birth) | x | ||
A6 | Re-location | x | x | x |
A6 | Neighbourhood | x | x | x |
A7 | Co-habitation | x | x | x |
A9 | Housing type and stability | x | x | x |
Community Connectedness | ||||
B1-2 | Community Involvement Measure | x | x | x |
B3 | Social Inclusion Scale | x | x | x |
B4 | Neighbourhood Cohesion | x | x | x |
Economic Participation & Employment | ||||
C2 | Employment Precarity | x | x | x |
C11 | Unemployment/non-participation | x | ||
C4 | Government assistance | x | x | x |
C1 | Income Generation (across continuum) | x | x | x |
C3 | Employment—formal & informal | x | x | x |
C12 | Disruptive Events | x | x | x |
C9 | Monthly Total Income, Allocation of monies | x | x | x |
Work Intentions and Barriers | ||||
D(1-6) | Perceptions of work: motivation to work, benefits of work (manifest and latent benefits) | x | x | x |
D7 | Barriers to work | x | x | x |
D8 | Perceived Employability Scale | x | x | x |
D9 | Latent functions of employment (time structure, financial strain, | x | x | x |
D10 | Resilience | x | x | x |
Material Security | ||||
E1 | Material Security | x | x | x |
E2 | Food Security Scale | x | x | x |
Education and Training | ||||
F1-3 | Education & Training (partial, completed, current, planned, referrals | x | x | x |
F4 | Training rigor | x | x | x |
G1 | Employment service engagement (accessed, referrals, programs) | x | x | x |
G2 | Barriers to accessing employment service | x | x | x |
Substance Use and drug-related harm | ||||
H1 | Substance past 12 months | x | ||
H2 | Substance past 3 months: drug, route, frequency, dose, street value | x | x | x |
H4 | Drug expenditure | x | x | x |
H5 | Reduced risk Substance Use Practices | x | x | x |
H6 | Riskier Substance Use Practices | x | x | x |
H8 | Reasons for Substance Use | x | x | x |
H9 | Substance use related to work | x | x | x |
J1-5 | Binge drug use (length, frequency, harms) | x | x | x |
K1-7 | Overdose (number, substance, route, help) | x | x | x |
Debt | ||||
L1 | Debt (who, reasons) | x | x | x |
L2-7 | Drug debt and repercussions | x | x | x |
Health measures | ||||
M1 | Violence exposure (Childhood, adulthood, current) | x | x | x |
M3 | Violence perpetration | x | x | x |
N1 | Satisfaction scale/quality of life | x | x | x |
N2 | Mental health | x | x | x |
N3 | Physical Health | x | x | x |
N4 | Current Health State | x | x | x |
Service Utilization and Service access barriers | ||||
O1-2 | Health Care (Hospital Admissions, emerg dept, drug use Tx EMS & paramedics, use and barriers) | x | x | x |
O3-4 | Social Services (use and barriers) | x | x | x |
O5 | Criminal Justice System (police interactions, circumstances) | x | x | x |
COVID-19 | ||||
CV1-2 | Awareness and Testing | x | ||
CV12-14 | Social Distancing and precautions | x | x | x |
CV15-16 | Housing precautions | x | x | x |
C17 | Community connectedness | x | x | x |
C18-21 | Education and training (enroll, barriers) | x | x | x |
CV23-33 | Income generation safety and changes | x | x | x |
CV34-36 | Social Assistance (changes, adequacy, barriers, clawbacks) | x | x | x |
CV37-40 | Substance use changes | x | x | x |
CV41-42 | Drug debt changes | x | x | x |
CV43-44 | Violence (social distancing, self-isolation, police presence) | x | x | x |
CV46 | Social services utilization barriers | x | x | x |
CV47 | Health services utilization barriers | x | x | x |
CV48 | Treatment services utilization barriers | x | x | x |
CV49-54 | Safe supply (use, adequacy, reasons barriers) | x | x | x |
Appendix B. Qualitative Enrolment and Follow-Up Schedule
Baseline Visits | Cumulative Enrolment | Eligible for Follow-up | Follow-up Visits | Withdrew | Deceased | Follow-Up Rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 07 (February–April 2021) | 26 | 26 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Round 08 (April–July 2021) | 11 | 37 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Round 09 (July–October 2021) | 3 | 40 | 25 | 21 | 0 | 0 | 84 |
Round 10 (November 2021–January 2022) | 1 | 41 | 15 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 53.33 |
Round 11 (February–April 2022) | 0 | 41 | 31 | 26 | 0 | 1 | 83.87 |
Total | 41 | 41 | NA | 55 | 0 | 2 | 73.73 |
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Baseline Visits | Cumulative Enrolment | Eligible for Follow-Up | Follow-Up Visits | Withdrew | Deceased | Follow-Up Rate (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Round 00 (Apr–Jul 2019) | 95 | 95 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | NA |
Round 01 (Jul–Oct 2019) | 87 | 182 | 93 | 84 | 1 | 2 | 90.32 |
Round 02 (Nov 2019–Jan 2020) | 24 | 206 | 177 | 155 | 0 | 4 | 87.57 |
Round 03 (Feb–Apr 2020) | 20 * | 226 | 197 | 80 * | 0 | 0 | 40.61 * |
Round 04 (Apr–Jul 2020) | 0 * | 0 * | 0 * | 0 * | 0 * | 0 * | 0 * |
Round 05 (Jul–Oct 2020) | 0 | 226 | 217 | 153 | 0 | 4 | 70.51 |
Round 06 (Nov 2020–Jan 2021) | 11 | 237 | 214 | 144 | 2 | 2 | 67.29 |
Round 07 (Feb–Apr 2021) | 4 | 241 | 221 | 149 | 1 | 3 | 67.42 |
Round 08 (Apr–Jul 2021) | 4 | 245 | 221 | 147 | 2 | 5 | 66.52 |
Round 09 (Jul–Oct 2021) | 5 | 250 | 218 | 136 | 0 | 3 | 62.39 |
Round 10 (Nov 2021–Jan 2022) | 1 | 251 | 221 | 157 | 0 | 5 | 71.04 |
Round 11 (Feb–Apr 2022) | 6 | 257 | 214 | 143 | 0 | 1 | 66.82 |
Total: | 257 | 257 | NA | 1347 | 8 | 29 | 62.77 |
n (%) | |
---|---|
Total | 256 (100%) |
Gender (n = 256) | |
Cisgender man | 145 (57%) |
Cisgender woman | 101 (39%) |
Transgender, gender diverse, or two-spirit | 10 (3.9%) |
Race/Ethnicity (n = 250) | |
Indigenous (Aboriginal, First Nations, Inuit, Metis) | 99 (40%) |
Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese, Filipino) | 11 (4.4%) |
Black (African, Caribbean) | 7 (2.8%) |
White (European or European descent) | 122 (49%) |
Not captured by above categories | 11 (4.4%) |
Born outside of Canada (n-255) | 23 (9.0%) |
Age (n = 256) | |
Less than 45 years old | 80 (31%) |
45–60 years old | 156 (61%) |
60+ years old | 20 (7.8%) |
Relationship status (n = 255) | |
Single/Dating | 177 (69%) |
Partnered/Married/Common law | 63 (25%) |
Separated/Divorced/Widowed | 15 (5.9%) |
Housing situation (n = 256) | |
Homeless past 30 days | 27 (11%) |
Stably housed | 229 (89%) |
Educational attainment (n = 256) | |
Less than high school | 132 (52%) |
High school or more | 124 (48%) |
Lifetime | Current a | |
---|---|---|
Substance use b | 254 (99%) | 218 (86%) |
Binge use | 195 (78%) | 72 (32%) |
Daily opioid use c | 251 (98%) | 69 (27%) |
Daily stimulant use d | 245 (96%) | 51 (20%) |
Accidental overdose | 140 (56%) | 29 (12%) |
Enrolled in substance use disorder treatment e | -- | 127 (50%) |
Satisfaction with health, range 0–10 (higher = higher satisfaction) | -- | 7.00 (6.00, 9.00) |
WHO Disability Assessment Schedule, range: 0–48 (higher = greater functional impairment) | -- | 14 (6, 22) |
Modified Colorado Symptom Index score, range: 0–50 (higher = higher symptom frequency) | -- | 12 (5, 19) |
Lifetime | Current a | |
---|---|---|
Average monthly income ($ CAD) d | -- | 1955 (1521, 2489) |
Attended school/training program b | 202 (79%) | 50 (20%) |
Used employment services | 141 (55%) | 80 (31%) |
Received income assistance | ||
Employable/hardship income assistance | 200 (78%) | 27 (11%) |
Disability assistance | 216 (84%) | 202 (83%) |
Employment insurance | 97 (38%) | 2 (0.8%) |
Old age security/Public pension | 22 (8.6%) | 20 (7.8%) |
Income generation | ||
Informal/prohibited/illegal activities | 245 (96%) | 191 (75%) |
Recycling (binning, buy/sell) c | 153 (60%) | 80 (31%) |
Squeegeeing | 18 (7.0%) | 0 (0%) |
Panhandling | 73 (29%) | 14 (5.5%) |
Theft, stealing (shoplifting, breaking into cars/houses) | 120 (47%) | 17 (6.6%) |
Selling needles | 18 (7.0%) | 1 (0.4%) |
Selling cigarettes/tobacco | 81 (32%) | 28 (11%) |
Selling drugs/enforcing | 150 (59%) | 43 (17%) |
Sex work | 21 (8.2%) | 2 (0.8%) |
Other criminal(ized) activity | 90 (35%) | 24 (9.4%) |
Stipend | 192 (75%) | 152 (59%) |
Formal employment | 246 (96%) | 129 (50%) |
Self-employed | 136 (53%) | 50 (20%) |
Primary employment-income source | ||
Casual (on-call, day labour) | -- | 105 (42%) |
Temporary/fixed term contract | -- | 22 (8.8%) |
Self-employed | -- | 20 (8.0%) |
Permanent part-time (<30 h/week)/varied hours | -- | 88 (35%) |
Permanent full-time (30 h or more/week) | -- | 14 (5.6%) |
Labour force participation | ||
Always had formal job or was looking for work | 16 (6.2%) | -- |
Usually have a job or looking for one | 82 (32%) | -- |
Vary between working/looking for work and not working/not looking | 78 (30%) | -- |
Rarely working or looking for work | 66 (26%) | -- |
Have never had or looked for formal job | 14 (5.5%) | -- |
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Richardson, L.; Minh, A.; McCormack, D.; Laing, A.; Barbic, S.; Hayashi, K.; Milloy, M.-J.; Huyser, K.R.; Leahy, K.; Li, J., on behalf of the ASSET Study Team. Cohort Profile: The Assessing Economic Transitions (ASSET) Study—A Community-Based Mixed-Methods Study of Economic Engagement among Inner-City Residents. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 10456. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191610456
Richardson L, Minh A, McCormack D, Laing A, Barbic S, Hayashi K, Milloy M-J, Huyser KR, Leahy K, Li J on behalf of the ASSET Study Team. Cohort Profile: The Assessing Economic Transitions (ASSET) Study—A Community-Based Mixed-Methods Study of Economic Engagement among Inner-City Residents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(16):10456. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191610456
Chicago/Turabian StyleRichardson, Lindsey, Anita Minh, Deb McCormack, Allison Laing, Skye Barbic, Kanna Hayashi, M.-J. Milloy, Kimberly R. Huyser, Kathleen Leahy, and Johanna Li on behalf of the ASSET Study Team. 2022. "Cohort Profile: The Assessing Economic Transitions (ASSET) Study—A Community-Based Mixed-Methods Study of Economic Engagement among Inner-City Residents" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 16: 10456. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191610456
APA StyleRichardson, L., Minh, A., McCormack, D., Laing, A., Barbic, S., Hayashi, K., Milloy, M. -J., Huyser, K. R., Leahy, K., & Li, J., on behalf of the ASSET Study Team. (2022). Cohort Profile: The Assessing Economic Transitions (ASSET) Study—A Community-Based Mixed-Methods Study of Economic Engagement among Inner-City Residents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(16), 10456. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191610456