Title
Predictors of Re-admission for Homeless Families in New York City: The Case of the Win Shelter Network.
Abstract
New York City faces the challenge of an ever-increasing homeless population with almost 60,000 people currently living in city shelters. In 2015, approximately 25% of families stayed longer than 9 months in a shelter, and 17% of families with children that exited a homeless shelter returned to the shelter system within 30 days of leaving. This suggests that long-term shelter residents and those that re-enter contribute significantly to the rise of the homeless population living in city and indicate systemic challenges to finding adequate permanent housing. Women in Need (Win) is a non-profit agency that provides shelter to almost 10,000 homeless women and children (10% of all homeless families of NYC), and is the largest homeless shelter provider in the City. This paper focuses on our preliminary work with Win to understand the factors that affect the rate of readmission of homeless families at Win shelters, and to predict the likelihood of re-entry into the shelter system on exit. These insights will enable improved service delivery and operational efficiencies at these shelters. This paper describes our recent efforts to integrate Win datasets with city records to create a unified, comprehensive database of the homeless population being served by Win shelters. A preliminary classification model is developed to predict the odds of readmission and length of shelter stay based on the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the homeless population served by Win. This work is intended to form the basis for establishing a network of smart shelters through the use of data science and data technologies.
Year
Venue
Field
2017
arXiv: Computers and Society
Population,Gerontology,Computer science,Knowledge management,Socioeconomics,Odds,Service delivery framework,Socioeconomic status
DocType
Volume
Citations 
Journal
abs/1710.06905
0
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.34
1
8