#72 Notable Clinical Interest
Emerging findings or policy developments worth monitoring closely.
Clinicians need to understand how housing policies that restrict cannabis use affect engagement and outcomes for vulnerable populations, as restrictive policies may drive patients to alternative substances or undermine housing stability. This research on resident attitudes toward cannabis-free policies in permanent supportive housing (PSH) can inform clinical recommendations about substance use management that balance recovery goals with practical barriers to treatment access. The findings help clinicians counsel patients on realistic options when housing, addiction treatment, and cannabis use intersect in their care.
This research examines attitudes toward substance-free policies among people experiencing homelessness in permanent supportive housing (PSH), specifically those using tobacco, cannabis, or both substances. Understanding resident perspectives on tobacco and cannabis restrictions is clinically relevant because PSH programs increasingly implement these policies to improve health outcomes, yet little is known about how such restrictions affect engagement and retention among vulnerable populations with high rates of polysubstance use and comorbid mental health conditions. The findings provide insight into whether addiction medicine and primary care providers should anticipate barriers to housing stability when advocating for or implementing abstinence-based policies, or conversely, what harm-reduction approaches might support both housing security and health improvement in this population. This work has implications for how clinicians counsel homeless patients about treatment options and for interdisciplinary collaboration between housing programs, addiction specialists, and social services. For practitioners working with homeless populations, these results can inform individualized counseling about substance use and housing stability by revealing what policies residents find acceptable versus counterproductive to their recovery goals.
“What we’re seeing in permanent supportive housing is that blanket prohibition policies actually push vulnerable patients away from services rather than toward recovery, and the evidence suggests harm reduction approaches that allow supervised cannabis use while addressing tobacco dependence achieve better retention and health outcomes than abstinence-only mandates.”
๐ฌ This research examining attitudes toward substance-free policies in permanent supportive housing settings highlights an important tension in addiction medicine: balancing harm reduction approaches with abstinence-focused recovery models. The perspectives of residents who use tobacco, cannabis, or both are particularly valuable since these populations often experience competing priorities around housing stability, symptom management, and substance useโand policies perceived as punitive may inadvertently reduce housing engagement or drive individuals toward less safe alternatives. However, clinicians should recognize that housing residents’ acceptance of such policies likely depends on multiple factors beyond the policies themselves, including the quality of onsite treatment services, peer support structures, and whether residents perceive genuine partnership in policy design versus top-down mandates. Given the heterogeneity of cannabis use patterns and individual recovery goals in this population, a one-size-fits-all policy approach may miss opportunities for more nuanced interventions. Practical implementation in clinical settings suggests involving residents meaningfully
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