RESEARCH
INFORMATION ON INDEPENDENT LIVING
Permission
granted to reproduce. Please cite source.
Volume
1, Issue 4
Homelessness
& Psychiatric Disabilities
The
last century saw the shift from institutionalization of people with psychiatric
disabilities to the community. While this was a major step forward for
independent living, it still remains that the population of people with
psychiatric disabilities needs a wide range of community-based services,
intensive outreach, acute care services, and income support.
The
need for support is clear: one recent study found that 36% of people who left
psychiatric institutions were homeless within six months. Once on the streets,
the trauma and stress of street life can increase psychiatric symptoms.
Homelessness also can worsen health problems, too, such as diabetes, AIDS, asthma, and physical disabilities.
Getting support services to people with psychiatric disabilities in general can be hard and is especially so when they lack permanent housing. One reason for the difficulty is the homeless population with psychiatric disabilities often distrusts large agencies and lack family members to help them understand the bureaucratic process. This population also has thinking and perception problems.
Here
are findings from recent studies that show how services can better reach and
assist homeless people with psychiatric disabilities.
·
Assertive
community treatment programs in which a team of case managers act as
around-the-clock consumer advocates have proven more effective than traditional
programs.
·
Two
service programs housed at one place improve access to disability entitlements.
·
Services
are better provided when programs cooperate and communicate with each other. For
example, a team of people from agencies offering assistance is easier for a
person with psychiatric disability to use than dealing with an individual from
each agency.
·
Mobile
case management — a team formed of a psychiatric nurse, two case managers, and
a project director — has been effective in service provision. In this form of
service delivery, the team goes to the individual rather than requesting the
individual coming to it for assistance.
Because centers for independent living have the potential to help, the
Research and Training Center on Independent Living at the University of Kansas
hosted a conference to look closer at the population's needs. Affordable, decent
housing was one of the greatest needs noted at the conference and its lack was
attributed to the population's low incomes and shortage of low-cost housing.
—
Cindy Higgins, The Research and Training Center on Independent Living,
The University of Kansas, 1000 Sunnyside Ave., Room 4089 Dole Center, Lawrence,
KS 66045-7555, (785) 864-4095, E-mail:[email protected]. This project funded by
National Institute on Disability Rehabilitation Research grant #H133A980048.
Information for
this review came from the interactive Research Information on Independent Living
(RIIL) database at www.GetRiil.org,
which contains research summaries related to independent living with
disabilities. A special effort has been made to include information that
independent leaders in the field said they wanted, namely topics regarding
accessible, affordable housing, effective advocacy for rural areas, effective
transition from schools and nursing homes, accessible, affordable
transportation, reaching underserved populations, policies that impede
independent living, rural health care services, and Medicaid/Medicare
regulations for durable equipment.
RIIL is a joint effort of the Research and Training Center on Independent Living at the University of Kansas and the Independent Living Research Utilization (ILRU) Program of TIRR.