Housing preferences and perceptions of health and functioning among homeless mentally ill persons
- 1 April 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in Psychiatric Services
- Vol. 47 (4) , 381-386
- https://doi.org/10.1176/ps.47.4.381
Abstract
Most homeless persons who have received services for serious mental illness want to live on their own, but mental health professionals usually recommend group housing. This study examined the relationship between the types of residential arrangements preferred by homeless mentally ill persons and their demographic and clinical characteristics and perceptions of their health and functional status. The study sample consisted of 118 homeless mentally ill persons living in publicly funded shelters in Boston who were enrolled in a research demonstration project that would provide them with housing. Before random assignment to housing, study participants were interviewed about their interest in moving, in staff support, and in living with others. Their clinical status and functional strengths and impairments were assessed using a variety of objective and subjective measures. Study participants reported a marked preference for independent living but expressed substantial interest in staff support. The desire for independent living was associated with a perceived ability to manage independent living, but was also associated with current substance abuse. Most indicators of clinical status and functional ability were not associated with housing preferences. Self-perceived functional ability may not be an influence on housing preferences, except when that ability is perceived as making independent living more difficult. Symptoms of mental illness did not appear to interfere with study participants' rational decision making about where to live. However, the study finding that substance abusers expressed a desire for independent living suggests the need for caution in adhering to homeless mentally ill persons' housing preferences, given the problems posed by substance abuse for their ability to maintain stable community housing.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Detection of substance use disorders in severely mentally ill patientsCommunity Mental Health Journal, 1993
- Responding to consumer housing preferences: The Toledo experience.Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal, 1990
- Housing satisfaction, preference and need among the chronically mentally disabled in Hamilton, OntarioSocial Science & Medicine, 1990
- Major mental illness, housing, and supports: The promise of community integration.American Psychologist, 1990
- Research on community support services: What have we learned.Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal, 1989
- A study of Expatients’ perspectives on their housing experiences and options∗Smith College Studies in Social Work, 1987
- Multiple Impairment Patterns in the Mentally Ill HomelessInternational Journal of Mental Health, 1985
- An Overview of Community Residences as Alternatives to HospitalizationPsychiatric Clinics of North America, 1985
- The Well-being of Chronic Mental PatientsArchives of General Psychiatry, 1983
- An Improved Diagnostic Evaluation Instrument for Substance Abuse PatientsJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1980