4.2 Article

Do Cognition and Other Person-Level Characteristics Determine Housing Outcomes Among Homeless-Experienced Adults With Serious Mental Illness?

Journal

PSYCHIATRIC REHABILITATION JOURNAL
Volume 44, Issue 2, Pages 176-185

Publisher

EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING FOUNDATION-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/prj0000457

Keywords

homelessness; serious mental illness; cognition; veterans

Funding

  1. VA HSRD PPO [15-188]

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This study aimed to identify person-level determinants of housing status among homeless-experienced veterans with serious mental illness, with a focus on cognition. Findings showed no significant differences in cognition, symptoms, or other person-level factors among participants grouped by housing status. Recursive partitioning did not yield a stable model to predict housing status from potential predictor variables.
Objective: Many persons with serious mental illness (SMI) who have experienced homelessness struggle to sustain stable and independent housing. We know little about determinants of this population's housing status. This study aimed to identify person-level determinants of housing status among homeless-experienced veterans with SMI, focused primarily on cognition. Method: We administered cross-sectional surveys and detailed cognitive assessments on a convenience sample of homeless-experienced veterans with SMI (n = 90); we also reviewed these participants' medical records. We captured person-level potential predictors of housing status (demographics, cognition, diagnoses, symptoms, and service utilization) and 2 years of retrospective housing history. Participants' housing status was conceptualized as the setting (stable housing, other sheltered settings, and streets) they lived in for >50% of the past 2 years. We used the chi-square test and analysis of variance to determine how potential predictors differed by housing status. We used recursive partitioning to identify the combination of potential predictors and corresponding scores that best-differentiated participants by housing status. Results: No between-groups differences (p < .05) in cognition, symptoms, or other person-level factors were found among participants grouped by housing status. Recursive partitioning did not yield a stable model to predict housing status from the potential predictor variables. Conclusions and Implications for Practice: These data suggest that clinical interventions addressing studied person-level factors (e.g., cognitive rehabilitation) may not affect housing status for homeless-experienced veterans. As housing is highly influenced by social determinants of health, policies, and practices that affect contextual factors (e.g., affordable housing supply) may be more likely to improve housing status.

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