Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness

Thesis advisor: Thomas O'Hare === Two primary community-based programs currently in use for people who suffer from severe, persistent mental illnesses are staffed group-homes, or intensive outreach residential programs, where the consumer lives independently and services are provi...

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Main Author: Murphy, Michael
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/31
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1018012019-05-10T07:34:09Z Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness Murphy, Michael Thesis advisor: Thomas O'Hare Text thesis 2008 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Two primary community-based programs currently in use for people who suffer from severe, persistent mental illnesses are staffed group-homes, or intensive outreach residential programs, where the consumer lives independently and services are provided in vivo. This study utilized a cross-sectional relational design and employed a consumer survey to examine how the well-being of people with severe and persistent mental illness and who receive one of these residential services. Well-being refers to the general quality of a person’s life and living situation, including their own perceptions of the quality of their life. For the purposes of this study, well-being was operationalized as the product of three domains: 1). demographic/diagnostic characteristics, including age, gender, race, length of service, educational level, marital status, diagnosis, and intensity of residential support; 2). objective life satisfaction indicators, such as immediate social network, extended social network, independent living/self care, working/productivity, global functioning, freedom from crisis/hospitalization; and 3). subjective life satisfaction indicators, including satisfaction with living arrangements, money, leisure time, family, social life, and health. An analysis of demographic and diagnostic variables indicated that with the exception of education level, respondents living in group homes are very similar to their counterparts receiving supported housing. Independent functioning ability was significantly higher for respondents receiving supported housing services in eight areas, including cooking, shopping, housekeeping, personal finances, use of medications, active use of services, pursuit of recovery goals, and ability to find and use health care. Group home residents were significantly more likely to have substance abuse problems than respondents receiving supported housing, and were more likely to have problems that could put them or others at risk. Respondents living independently with supported housing services reported higher satisfaction with their living situation and with their relationship to their family. Group home residents were more satisfied about the availability of money for leisure activities. Exploratory analysis of the data using logistic regression suggested that such an analysis might be useful in identifying which qualities of applicants for residential services would provide a better “fit” to a particular model of treatment. Implications for policy, practice, and future research are addressed. mental illness well-being residential support quality of life recovery Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Social Work. Discipline: Social Work. 71409 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/31
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic mental illness
well-being
residential support
quality of life
recovery
spellingShingle mental illness
well-being
residential support
quality of life
recovery
Murphy, Michael
Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
description Thesis advisor: Thomas O'Hare === Two primary community-based programs currently in use for people who suffer from severe, persistent mental illnesses are staffed group-homes, or intensive outreach residential programs, where the consumer lives independently and services are provided in vivo. This study utilized a cross-sectional relational design and employed a consumer survey to examine how the well-being of people with severe and persistent mental illness and who receive one of these residential services. Well-being refers to the general quality of a person’s life and living situation, including their own perceptions of the quality of their life. For the purposes of this study, well-being was operationalized as the product of three domains: 1). demographic/diagnostic characteristics, including age, gender, race, length of service, educational level, marital status, diagnosis, and intensity of residential support; 2). objective life satisfaction indicators, such as immediate social network, extended social network, independent living/self care, working/productivity, global functioning, freedom from crisis/hospitalization; and 3). subjective life satisfaction indicators, including satisfaction with living arrangements, money, leisure time, family, social life, and health. An analysis of demographic and diagnostic variables indicated that with the exception of education level, respondents living in group homes are very similar to their counterparts receiving supported housing. Independent functioning ability was significantly higher for respondents receiving supported housing services in eight areas, including cooking, shopping, housekeeping, personal finances, use of medications, active use of services, pursuit of recovery goals, and ability to find and use health care. Group home residents were significantly more likely to have substance abuse problems than respondents receiving supported housing, and were more likely to have problems that could put them or others at risk. Respondents living independently with supported housing services reported higher satisfaction with their living situation and with their relationship to their family. Group home residents were more satisfied about the availability of money for leisure activities. Exploratory analysis of the data using logistic regression suggested that such an analysis might be useful in identifying which qualities of applicants for residential services would provide a better “fit” to a particular model of treatment. Implications for policy, practice, and future research are addressed. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2008. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Social Work. === Discipline: Social Work.
author Murphy, Michael
author_facet Murphy, Michael
author_sort Murphy, Michael
title Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
title_short Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
title_full Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
title_fullStr Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
title_full_unstemmed Residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
title_sort residential placement and well-being among persons recovering from serious mental illness
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/31
work_keys_str_mv AT murphymichael residentialplacementandwellbeingamongpersonsrecoveringfromseriousmentalillness
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