Resource Library (ACHCH)

Resource Library (ACHCH)

See below for resources related to Housing and Homelessness Services.

Health Care for the Homeless Resource Library

​​​2024 Trainings

​​​Working with People with Psychosis (May 22)

Navigating Older Adult Services in Alameda County (April 24)

Understanding Palliative Care for People Experiencing Homelessness (March 27)

Navigating Alameda County Behavioral Health’s Specialty Mental Health Services (February 28)

Harm Reduction (Part One): Working with People Who Use Drugs (January 24)

Harm Reduction (Part Two): Common Risk Factors & Interventions for People Who Use Drugs (January 31)

2023 Trainings

​Helping Our Most Medically Complex Clients (December 13)

Communicable Disease Control for Shelter Providers (November 8)

Accessing Medical Care: Homeless Healthcare Team Approach (October 25)

Ethics & Boundaries When Working with Unhoused Communities (September 27)

Racism, Homelessness, and Trauma Informed Care (April 26)

Harm Reduction (March 22)

De-escalation (February 22)

2022 Trainings 

Bed Bugs & Other Blood Feeding Vectors (November 16)

CalAim (October 26)

Cultural Bias & Intersectionality (October 12)

LGBTQI+ 101: Part One (September 28)

LGBTQI+ 101: Part Two (October 5)

Coordinated Entry (July 27)

HIV/HCV Testing & Linkage (May 25)

  • Video
  • Presentation Slides (pdf)
  • HIV test result disclosure (topic: delivering a positive test result, video length: 9 minutes, source: CA Prevention Training Center)
    • Some things we might do differently:
      • Offer treatment that day (rapid ART).  
      • Give more time and opportunities for the client to speak and share their concerns (talk less, listen more).

Managing End-of-Life Care for Homeless Patients (April 27)

Working With People With Psychosis (March 23)

Harm Reduction (February 23)

Trauma Informed Care

De-escalation (January 26)

Self-Care and Stress Reduction for Mental Health

Emergency Preparedness

Research and Publications

Alameda County Point in Time Count 2024

  • Alameda County’s bi-annual point-in-time count of people experiencing homelessness.  

Alameda County Homeless Mortality Report 2021

  • The Alameda County Homeless Mortality report seeks to accurately enumerate deaths among people experiencing homelessness to inform policies and practices to reduce preventable deaths and to reduce the harm that preventable deaths create for families, friends, caregivers, and the community. Homeless Mortality reporting will help our health and housing partners develop interventions to reduce deaths among those experiencing homelessness.

Poster: Convening a Community of Care to Respond to the COVID-19 Crisis (2022)

  • Poster presented at the 2022 National Health Care for the Homeless Council conference detailing the importance of community coordination and highlighting ACHCH’s work in partnership with local government and community members in responding to COVID-19. 

EveryOne Counts!  Alameda County Point in Time Count 2022

  • EveryOne Counts! is Alameda County’s bi-annual point-in-time count of people experiencing homelessness. The most recent count took place in February 2022.  Click here for detailed information.

Alameda County Homeless Mortality Report 2018-2020

  • The Alameda County Health Care for the Homeless (ACHCH) and Community Assessment, Planning, and Evaluation (CAPE) teams have released the County’s first-ever Homeless Mortality Report, a retrospective report on homeless deaths from 2018 to 2020 in Alameda County.

A Mobile Buprenorphine Treatment Program for Homeless Patients with Opioid Use Disorder

  • Psychiatry Online published an article authored by Colin Buzza, M.D., M.P.H., Andrea Elser, B.A., and Jeffrey Seal, M.D. regarding opioid-related overdose deaths.

EveryOne Counts!  Alameda County Point in Time Count 2019

  • EveryOne Counts! is Alameda County’s bi-annual point-in-time count of people experiencing homelessness. The most recent count took place in January 2019.  Click here for information. 

Alameda County Health Care for the Homeless Uses the StreetHealth Team to Treat SUD on the Street

  • In 2017, ACHCH developed the StreetHealth Team using HRSA funding. This multi-disciplinary team works out of a small mobile unit led by a psychiatrist and includes a substance-use-credentialed nurse and outreach workers. 

Alameda County Health Care for the Homeless Strategic Plan

  • 2019-2021 Strategic Plan for ACHCH

County of Alameda Homelessness Solutions Action Plan 2018-2021

  • A three-year Homelessness Action Plan sets forth a plan for Alameda County to invest $340 million over the next three years toward addressing homelessness.

Housing Oakland’s Unhoused: Community-based Solutions (2018)

  • Dellums Institute for Social Justice/Just Cities, The Village, and The East Oakland Collective worked with the UC Berkeley Goldman School of Public Policy in 2018 to form the Housing & Dignity Project to advance community solutions.

HOPE/Home Study

  • The HOPE/Home study follows a cohort of 350 older homeless adults in Oakland, California, over three years, using clinical assessments and structured interviews to assess geriatric conditions (functional, cognitive, and sensory impairment), housing history, behavioral health (mental health and alcohol and illicit substance use), physical health (chronic diseases), and acute healthcare utilization (Emergency Department visits, inpatient hospitalizations, and skilled nursing facility placement). David Modersbach, ACHCH Grant Manager, serves on the Advisory Board for the HOPE/Home study. 

Alameda County Homelessness Solutions Summit

  • On February 22, 2018, the Alameda County Homelessness Solutions Summit was held in San Leandro, CA. The summit was convened to bring together County and City officials, policymakers, advocates, and the people experiencing homelessness in Alameda County. They spent the day discussing solutions to homelessness and recognizing that we’re all in this together, even though we have separate and distinct jurisdictional responsibilities. Watch a video that was created for the summit. For more information, visit Alameda County Homelessness Solutions Summit

Overview of Homelessness in Alameda County (2016)

  • This press kit, prepared in June 2016, provides statistics and anecdotes that describe the state of homelessness in Alameda County. The report also addresses the causes of homelessness and the county’s approach to reducing homelessness. Direct service programs are listed, as well as policy and structural initiatives such as coordinated entry, prioritized access to permanent supportive housing, and a proposed housing bond ballot measure.

Hayward Homeless Assessment 2016

  • A community-wide assessment of homelessness conducted by the Hayward Task Force to End Hunger and Homelessness and Cal State East Bay. 

2015 Health Care Needs Assessment of Persons Experiencing Homelessness in Alameda County

  • As an HRSA-funded Health Center, Alameda County Health Care for the Homeless (ACHCH) carries out a periodic Needs Assessment to help inform the program and determine the health care needs of persons experiencing homelessness.  Our most recent Needs Assessment was carried out in 2015, updated in 2018, and is based on the evaluation of a variety of utilization, survey and research data. 

Homeless Health Care Reports and Resources:

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Other Reports

  • Development Without Displacement (2014) presents the health impacts of rising housing costs which are pushing lower-income Alameda County residents out of their communities.
  • Without Housing (2010), published by the Western Regional Advocacy Project, focuses on the primary reason so many people are homeless in the United States today: the near elimination of the federal government’s commitment to building, maintaining, and subsidizing affordable housing.
  • Rebuilding Neighborhoods, Restoring Health: A Report on the Impacts of Housing Foreclosures on Public Health (2010) describes the health and economic impacts that foreclosures have had on individual residents and neighborhoods in Oakland, roots the current crisis in the history of housing discrimination, and provides recommendations to help mitigate and prevent further health impacts.