Implementing Housing First in Australia
Overview
This implementation brief from The ALIVE National Centre examines the Housing First (HF) approach for people living with serious mental health issues (MHI) who are experiencing homelessness. It outlines the evidence base for HF, implementation research including lived experience perspectives, scalability considerations, and practical guidelines across systems, community, service, and individual levels for implementing HF in the Australian context.
Developed by The ALIVE National Centre for Mental Health Research Translation
Key insights
This implementation brief presents evidence on the Housing First (HF) approach as a global and Australian response to homelessness among people living with serious mental health issues. It affirms HF's effectiveness in securing stable housing and improving wellbeing outcomes, while acknowledging structural, funding, and sustainability challenges to scaling it in the Australian context. Practical implementation guidelines are provided across systems, community, service, and individual levels, emphasising the importance of collaboration, lived experience integration, and person-centred values.
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The brief directly addresses government policy makers and housing authorities, providing systems-level implementation guidelines and calling for policy reform to support HF scalability in Australia.
Service leaders will find practical guidance on building coordinated, cross-sector HF programs and embedding lived experience roles within service delivery.
Frontline workers and service providers are a core audience, with service-level guidelines on target population identification, coordination, peer support integration, and training in HF principles.
The brief synthesises a substantial body of research and flags areas for further implementation science, making it relevant to researchers working in housing, mental health, and homelessness.
People with lived experience of homelessness and serious mental health issues are the population central to this resource. While not written for consumers directly, the inclusion of lived experience perspectives and person-centred values makes it relevant to consumer advocacy and engagement contexts.
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Categories
Resource type
Practice Guideline
Evidence Summary
Target audiences
Consumers
Practitioners
Policymakers
Researchers
Service Leaders
Translational research priority theme
Community-based models of care
Alternatives to compulsory treatment, seclusion and restraint
Workforce capability
Working with diverse consumers, families and communities
Embedding responsible, safe and ethical practice
Understanding and responding to trauma
Understanding and responding to mental health crisis and suicide
Delivering holistic and collaborative assessment and care planning
Delivering compassionate care, support and treatment
Promoting prevention, early intervention and help-seeking
Supporting system navigation, partnerships and collaborative care
Enabling reflective and supportive ways of working
Embedding evidence-informed continuous improvement
Population cohort
Adults
People experiencing homelessness
Culturally & Linguistically Diverse Communities
Collaborative Centre core function
Lived Experience Participation
Service delivery