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Journal article

Housing Choice and Control, Housing Quality, and Control over Professional Support as Contributors to the Subjective Quality of Life and Community Adaptation of People with Severe Mental Illness

Abstract

This research examined two premises of supported housing: (a) that consumer choice/control over housing and support and the quality of housing are important contributors to the subjective quality of life and adaptation to community living of people with mental illness, and (b) that apartments provide mental health consumers with more choice/control over housing and support than group living arrangements. To test these two hypotheses, we collected data from participants with mental illness housed through a government initiative in Ontario, Canada. A total of 130 participants completed a baseline interview, and 91 of those participants also completed a follow-up interview 9-months later. Support was found for both hypotheses. The results were discussed in terms of the paradigm of supported housing, previous research, and implications for housing policy and program development in the community mental health sector.

Authors

Nelson G; Sylvestre J; Aubry T; George L; Trainor J

Journal

Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 89–100

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

DOI

10.1007/s10488-006-0083-x

ISSN

0894-587X

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