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2.
J Community Psychol ; 48(6): 1913-1928, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32516837

ABSTRACT

AIMS: This study explored community integration within a Moving On initiative that assisted individuals with the transition from permanent supportive housing (PSH) to more independent housing without service requirements. METHODS: Participants completed baseline interviews while in PSH (n = 90) and, for those who moved on, a follow-up 1-year post-move (n = 45). Bivariate analyses and OLS regression were used to examine community integration outcomes and potential correlates. RESULTS: For participants who moved on, subjective social quality of life and sense of community were higher post-move, while physical integration decreased, and time spent at home increased. Gender, mastery, and housing quality were associated with community integration post-move. CONCLUSION: Moving On did not adversely impact most aspects of community integration, though PSH residents may need more support to facilitate participation in routine activities outside their home post-move. Findings also highlight the importance of supporting mastery given its potential role in community integration.


Subject(s)
Community Integration/psychology , Ill-Housed Persons/psychology , Public Housing/supply & distribution , Adult , Community Integration/ethnology , Female , Ill-Housed Persons/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Multivariate Analysis , Public Housing/trends , Quality of Life/psychology , Residence Characteristics , Social Support
3.
Am J Orthopsychiatry ; 90(5): 523-534, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32309975

ABSTRACT

Low-income communities of color experience significant political, economic, and health inequities and, not unrelatedly, are disproportionately exposed to violent crime than are residents of higher income communities. In an effort to mitigate concentrations of poverty and crime, governmental agencies have partnered with affordable housing developers to redevelop public housing "projects" into mixed-income communities and to do so within a "trauma-informed" framework. The current study analyzes how residents have historically and contemporaneously negotiated, endured, and resisted structural and interpersonal violence in 2 long-standing, predominately African American, public housing communities undergoing a public-private housing redevelopment initiative. Interviews with 44 adult public housing residents (age range = 18-75 years; 82% African American/Black) were conducted during a 2-year period while residents' homes were being demolished and rebuilt into mixed-income communities. Analysis of in-depth interviews used constructivist grounded theory principles to reveal a common theme and basic social process of the ongoing formation of homeplace, with subthemes focusing on the ways homeplace emerges through shared lineage, knowing and caring practices; how homeplace is maintained through networks of protection in unsafe contexts; how homeplace is disrupted as a result of redevelopment activities; and the reclamation of homeplace during redevelopment in the service of hope and healing. These findings offer a nuanced view of resident's lived experiences of place-based trauma and collective resistance and resilience, while also highlighting the place-specific ways in which redevelopment unsettles deeply rooted sociocultural configurations of home and community. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Health Status Disparities , Poverty , Public Housing/standards , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , California , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Public Housing/trends , Qualitative Research , Social Support , Young Adult
4.
Soc Sci Med ; 238: 112515, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31473573

ABSTRACT

In the context of population ageing in many developed and developing countries, encouraging active transport behaviors of older adults, is a key public health priority. However, many cross-sectional studies assessing the impact of built environment characteristics on travel behavior fail to address residential self-selection bias, and hence the causal relationship is uncertain. A large-scale public housing scheme provided this study with a unique research opportunity to distinguish residential self-selection from the effects of built environment characteristics on the travel behaviors of older adults (N = 13,468 and 3,961 in two analyses respectively) in Hong Kong, because public housing residents have little freedom to choose their residential locations. The results showed that the elderly living in public housing estates generally have fewer trips, shorter overall travel times and distances, and fewer motorized trips including those by rail or private car than those living in private housing estates. In addition, the results for walking, walking times, numbers of trips, and travel distance for elderly people in public and private housing all exhibited markedly different associations with built environment characteristics. Strength of built environment-travel behavior associations dropped by approximately 30-50% after controlling for the effect of residential self-selection. The results indicate that both built environment characteristics and residential self-selection affect travel behaviors.


Subject(s)
Built Environment/classification , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Travel/psychology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Built Environment/statistics & numerical data , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Hong Kong , Humans , Male , Public Housing/standards , Public Housing/trends , Travel/statistics & numerical data
5.
Epidemiol Infect ; 147: e222, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31364585

ABSTRACT

In November 2016, a woman in her 30s who stayed at an insecure, temporary housing facility, a manga café in Tokyo, Japan, for a year was diagnosed with sputum smear-positive tuberculosis (TB). Since the café had 31 staff members and provided with accommodation to many people, the local health office initiated a contact investigation. This study aims to characterise the cases found in the outbreak. A TB case was defined as a person tested bacteriologically positive for TB, or was determined to have TB by a physician. A latent TB infection case was defined as a person tested positive by interferon-γ release assay. From January 2016 through November 2017, there were 31 staff members at the manga café, of which, six developed TB disease (one smear-negative, culture-positive and five smear- and culture-negative) in addition to seven LTBI. Another long-term customer was found having sputum smear-positive TB. Variable numbers tandem repeat (VNTR) test revealed that the index patient and the long-term customer had the identical type of VNTR; however, one staff member had a different VNTR. Local health authorities should intensify screening long-term customers of such facilities for TB regularly as well as once a TB outbreak occurs.


Subject(s)
Contact Tracing/statistics & numerical data , Disease Outbreaks/statistics & numerical data , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/isolation & purification , Public Housing/trends , Tuberculosis/epidemiology , Adult , Cohort Studies , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Contact Tracing/methods , Female , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Minisatellite Repeats/genetics , Poverty , Prevalence , Retrospective Studies , Risk Assessment , Social Class , Sputum/microbiology , Tokyo , Tuberculosis/diagnosis , Urban Population , Young Adult
7.
Nicotine Tob Res ; 20(12): 1434-1441, 2018 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29145626

ABSTRACT

Background: Lower rates of smoking cessation are a major reason for the higher prevalence of smoking among socioeconomically disadvantaged adults. Because barriers to quitting are both more numerous and severe, socioeconomically disadvantaged smokers may benefit from more intensive intervention. We sought to determine whether a smoking cessation intervention delivered by public housing residents trained as Tobacco Treatment Advocates (TTAs) could increase utilization of cessation resources and increase abstinence. Methods: We conducted a group-randomized trial among Boston public housing residents who were interested in quitting smoking. Participants at control sites received standard cessation materials and a one-time visit from a TTA who provided basic counseling and information about cessation resources. Participants at intervention sites were eligible for multiple visits by a TTA who employed motivational interviewing, cessation counseling, and navigation to encourage smokers to utilize cessation treatment (Smokers' Quitline and clinic-based programs). Utilization and 7-day and 30-day point prevalence abstinence were assessed at 12 months. Self-reported abstinence was biochemically verified. Results: Intervention participants (n = 121) were more likely than control participants (n = 129) to both utilize treatment programs (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 2.15; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.93-4.91) and 7-day and 30-day point prevalence abstinence (aOR: 2.60 (1.72-3.94); 2.98 (1.56-5.68), respectively). Mediation analysis indicated that the higher level of utilization did not explain the intervention effect. Conclusions: An intervention delivered by peer health advocates was able to increase utilization of treatment programs and smoking abstinence among public housing residents. Future studies of similar types of interventions should identify the key mechanisms responsible for success. Implications: In order to narrow the large and growing socioeconomic disparity in smoking rates, more effective cessation interventions are needed for low-income smokers. Individual culturally-relevant coaching provided in smokers' residences may help overcome the heightened barriers to cessation experienced by this group of smokers. In this study among smokers residing in public housing, an intervention delivered by peer health advocates trained in motivational interviewing, basic smoking cessation skills, and client navigation significantly increased abstinence at 12 months. Future research should address whether these findings are replicable in other settings both within and outside of public housing.


Subject(s)
Community Health Services/methods , Community Health Services/trends , Public Housing/trends , Smoking Cessation/methods , Tobacco Smoking/trends , Tobacco Smoking/therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Boston/epidemiology , Community Health Services/economics , Counseling/economics , Counseling/methods , Counseling/trends , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Motivational Interviewing/economics , Motivational Interviewing/methods , Motivational Interviewing/trends , Poverty/economics , Poverty/trends , Public Health/economics , Public Health/methods , Public Health/trends , Public Housing/economics , Smoking Cessation/economics , Time Factors , Tobacco Smoking/economics , Tobacco Smoking/epidemiology , Tobacco Use Cessation Devices/economics , Tobacco Use Cessation Devices/trends , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
9.
Soc Sci Med ; 139: 90-9, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26164364

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This study uses a mixed methods approach to 1) identify surrounding residents' perceived expectations for Housing Opportunities for People Everywhere (HOPE VI) policy on physical activity outcomes and to 2) quantitatively examine the odds of neighborhood-based physical activity pre-/post-HOPE VI in a low socioeconomic status, predominantly African American community in Birmingham, Alabama. METHODS: To address aim one, we used group concept mapping which is a structured approach for data collection and analyses that produces pictures/maps of ideas. Fifty-eight residents developed statements about potential influences of HOPE VI on neighborhood-based physical activity. In the quantitative study, we examined whether these potential influences increased the odds of neighborhood walking/jogging. We computed block entry logistic regression models with a larger cohort of residents at baseline (n = 184) and six-months (n = 142, 77% retention; n = 120 for all informative variables). We examined perceived neighborhood disorder (perceived neighborhood disorder scale), walkability and aesthetics (Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale) and HOPE VI-related community safety and safety for physical activity as predictors. RESULTS: During concept mapping, residents generated statements that clustered into three distinct concepts, "Increased Leisure Physical Activity," "Safe Play Areas," and "Generating Health Promoting Resources." The quantitative analyses indicated that changes in neighborhood walkability increased the odds of neighborhood-based physical activity (p = 0.04). When HOPE VI-related safety for physical activity was entered into the model, it was associated with increased odds of physical activity (p = 0.04). Walkability was no longer statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that housing policies that create walkable neighborhoods and that improve perceptions of safety for physical activity may increase neighborhood-based physical activity. However, the longer term impacts of neighborhood-level policies on physical activity require more longitudinal evidence to determine whether increased participation in physical activity is sustained.


Subject(s)
Environment Design/trends , Health Behavior , Perception , Public Housing/trends , Residence Characteristics , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23543019

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Green housing reduces energy costs and may mitigate indoor allergens and pollutants, improving asthma morbidity. High asthma burden is seen in low-income neighborhoods. Past studies show improvements in respiratory symptoms when living in green homes. OBJECTIVE: Develop partnership with Blue Sea Development Company to determine impacts of living in Melrose Commons V (MCV), a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Platinum-certified affordable housing complex, on asthma in the South Bronx. METHODS: Participants completed a home-based respiratory health questionnaire before moving into MCV. Follow-up occurred at 6, 12, and 18 months post-move. A home-based educational module was delivered on indoor environmental interventions to avoid asthma triggers. A pretest was given before the module and a posttest was given 9 months later, including an evaluation of behavioral practice changes. RESULTS: Outcomes included decreases in continuous daily respiratory symptoms (p < .001), asthma symptoms disrupting sleep in the past month (p = .028), and urgent visits to a healthcare professional for asthma in the past 3 months (p = .038). Clinically relevant outcomes included fewer days with asthma symptoms; asthma episodes; days of work, school, or daycare missed; and emergency department visits. Education changes from pretest to posttest included increased knowledge about dust mites, roaches, mold, and chemical irritants (p = .007). Common behavioral changes included using hypoallergenic mattress covers, using green cleaning products, and eliminating bedroom carpets. CONCLUSIONS: Findings support the beneficial effect of LEED Platinum-certified buildings on respiratory health. Trends may be clinically and economically relevant. Advocacy efforts should promote the expansion of green housing and emphasize the development of healthy communities.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor/prevention & control , Asthma/prevention & control , Environment Design/standards , Environmental Exposure/prevention & control , Green Chemistry Technology/standards , Public Housing/standards , Adolescent , Adult , Air Pollution, Indoor/adverse effects , Asthma/etiology , Child , Child, Preschool , Community-Based Participatory Research , Disease Progression , Environmental Exposure/adverse effects , Female , Green Chemistry Technology/methods , Health Education/methods , Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Infant , Male , Middle Aged , New York City , Program Evaluation , Public Housing/trends , Young Adult
11.
J Urban Health ; 88(3): 454-68, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21626232

ABSTRACT

Struening et al.1 demonstrated a widening disparity of low birthweight (LOB) rates among New York City health areas from 1980-1986, clearly a dynamic process. In contrast, the New York City Department of Health reported static citywide LOB rate in 1988-2008.2 Struening et al.1 is extended here at the health district level with mapping and regression analyses. Additionally, birthweight data are reported for babies born in 1998-2001 to a group of African-American and Dominican women in Upper Manhattan. The data reported in this paper indicate that both fetal programming of the mother herself (life course model) and stress during or shortly before pregnancy may play a role in LOB. Current stress may arise from past events. Intergenerational effects, thus, could arise from stresses on the grandmother and their residual impacts on the mother as well as new stresses on the mother as an adult. The average weight of babies born to the Upper Manhattan mothers who were born in 1970-1974 was 3,466 g, with 1.6% below 2,500 g; that of babies of mothers born in 1975-1979, 3,320 g, with 6% below 2,500 g. The latter group was born during the 1975-1979 housing destruction. Intergenerational impacts of that event may be reflected in this elevated rate of LOB. Health district maps of LOB incidence ranges show improvement from 1990-2000 and then deterioration in 2005 and 2008. Bivariate regressions of socioeconomic (SE) factors and LOB incidence showed many strong associations in 1990; but by 2000, the number and strength of these associations declined. In 1990, 2000, and 2008, black segregation was the SE factor most strongly associated with LOB. Black segregation and murder rate explained about 85% of the pattern of 1990 LOB. Regressing the 1970-1980 percent population change against the SE factors showed effects even in 2000. The 1990 murder rate and 1989 percentage of public assistance explained over half the 2008 LOB incidence pattern. The housing destruction of the 1970s continued to influence LOB incidence indirectly in 2008. The ability of community and individual to cope with current stressors may hinge on resilience status, which is shaped by past events and circumstances. The present interacts with the past in many ways. Serial displacement exemplifies this interaction of immense importance to public health.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Health Status Disparities , Infant, Low Birth Weight , Public Housing/trends , Stress, Psychological/complications , Urban Renewal/trends , Adult , Catchment Area, Health/statistics & numerical data , Crime/statistics & numerical data , Dominican Republic/ethnology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Infant, Newborn , New York City/epidemiology , Pregnancy , Regression Analysis , Socioeconomic Factors
12.
J Urban Health ; 88(3): 417-35, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21607787

ABSTRACT

HOPE VI has funded the demolition of public housing developments across the United States and created in their place mixed-income communities that are often inaccessible to the majority of former tenants. This recent uprooting of low-income, urban, and predominantly African American communities raises concern about the health impacts of the HOPE VI program for a population that already shoulders an enormous burden of excess morbidity and mortality. In this paper, we rely on existing literature about HOPE VI relocation to evaluate the program from the perspective of weathering-a biosocial process hypothesized by Geronimus to underlie early health deterioration and excess mortality observed among African Americans. Relying on the weathering framework, we consider the effects of HOPE VI relocation on the material context of urban poverty, autonomous institutions that are health protective, and on the broader discourse surrounding urban poverty. We conclude that relocated HOPE VI residents have experienced few improvements to the living conditions and economic realities that are likely sources of stress and illness among this population. Additionally, we find that relocated residents must contend with these material realities, without the health-protective, community-based social resources that they often rely on in public housing. Finally, we conclude that by disregarding the significance of health-protective autonomous institutions and by obscuring the structural context that gave rise to racially segregated public housing projects, the discourse surrounding HOPE VI is likely to reinforce health-demoting stereotypes of low-income urban African American communities. Given the potential for urban and housing policies to negatively affect the health of an already vulnerable population, we argue that a health-equity perspective is a critical component of future policy conversations.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Health Status Disparities , Poverty , Public Housing/standards , Urban Renewal , Chicago , Family Health , Georgia , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Program Evaluation , Public Housing/trends , Social Support , Transients and Migrants/psychology , United States
13.
Porto Alegre; Associação Nacional de Tecnologia do Ambiente Construído; 2009. 216 p. ilus, tab.(Habitare, 9).
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-691652

ABSTRACT

Desde a crise que afetou o Sistema Financeiro da Habitação no início dos anos 80 e que desestruturou o esforço de desenvolvimento tecnológico na área, até então apoiado pelo Banco Nacional de Habitação (BNH), nunca o Brasil teve outro momento em que os recursos destinados à construção de moradias tenham sido tão expressivos. O livro editado pelo pesquisador do Observatório das Metrópoles Adauto L. Cardoso e por Nabil Bonduki traz resultados de pesquisa apoiadas pelo Programa Habitare que investigam questões importantes nesse contexto, como o desenvolvimento de processos e produtos destinados à recuperação sustentável de assentamentos precários e melhoria da moradia de interesse social. Entre outros estudos, há iniciativas voltadas ao aperfeiçoamento de componentes, técnicas e métodos construtivos, e também a aspectos regulatórios ou organizacionais que envolvem procedimentos de gestão dos empreendimentos. Além de dar visibilidade às pesquisas, o livro chama a atenção para o desafio de articular pesquisa e políticas públicas, em busca de moradia digna e cidades mais equilibradas. Por isso, a publicação tem grande interesse não apenas para os especialistas, mas também para os gestores da área urbana e habitacional, cuja capacitação é essencial para o fortalecimento da administração pública.


Subject(s)
Humans , Environmental Hazards , Public Housing/trends , Public Policy , Sustainable Development , Urban Population , Engineering , Regional Development
14.
Rio de Janeiro; Fiocruz; 2007. ^c23m:08s.
Non-conventional in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-756822

ABSTRACT

Antigos e novos moradores de Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro/RJ, montam um mosaico de narrativas que juntas compõem a história do bairro. História de pessoas e lugares nos ajudam a entender a história das 13 comunidades que formam esta região, que mostram um passado que se confunde com o presente, ainda sem saneamento básico, saúde, educação e lazer...


Subject(s)
Humans , Basic Sanitation , Social Conditions/history , Education , Public Housing/trends , Leisure Activities , Poverty Areas
16.
Policy Polit Nurs Pract ; 6(4): 335-42, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16443989

ABSTRACT

Decent, affordable housing is the building block of healthy neighborhoods. Housing characteristics not only shape the quality of life in communities but also affect individual and family health. The structural and social aspects of housing have a significant impact on the health of individuals and populations. Early public health nursing pioneers such as Lillian Wald and Jane E. Hitchcock understood the adverse impact of substandard housing on population health and incorporated advocacy for housing and other social policy reforms as an integral aspect of their nursing interventions. Contemporary nursing literature, however, is lacking in its critical examination of relationships between housing and health. This article presents historical and current issues in low-income housing policy, discusses how low-income housing policy has contributed to social inequalities in health, and advocates for the importance and inherent value of nursing inquiry and intervention in this area.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Nursing Research/organization & administration , Poverty , Public Health Nursing/organization & administration , Public Housing , Women's Health , Community Health Planning/organization & administration , Female , Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Policy/trends , Health Services Needs and Demand , Health Status , Humans , Knowledge , Nurse's Role , Poverty/legislation & jurisprudence , Poverty/psychology , Poverty/statistics & numerical data , Poverty/trends , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Health/statistics & numerical data , Public Health/trends , Public Housing/statistics & numerical data , Public Housing/trends , Quality of Life , Social Environment
17.
J Public Health Med ; 23(2): 148-54, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11450932

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Policies and practice in many sectors affect health. Health impact assessment (HIA) is a way to predict these health impacts, in order to recommend improvements in policies to improve health. There has been debate about appropriate methods for this work. The Scottish Executive funded the Scottish Needs Assessment Programme to conduct two pilot HIAs and from these to develop guidance on HIA. METHODS: Case study 1 compared three possible future scenarios for developing transport in Edinburgh, based on funding levels. It used a literature review, analysis of local data and the knowledge and opinions of key informants. Impacts borne by different population groups.were compared using grids. Case study 2 assessed the health impacts of housing investment in a disadvantaged part of Edinburgh, using published literature, focus groups with community groups and interviews with professionals. RESULTS: Disadvantaged communities bore more detrimental effects from the low transport investment scenario, in the areas of: accidents; pollution; access to amenities, jobs and social contacts; physical activity; and impacts on community networks. The housing investment had greatest impact on residents' mental health, by reducing overcrowding, noise pollution, stigma and fear of crime. CONCLUSION: Although there is no single 'blueprint' for HIA that will be appropriate for all circumstances, key principles to inform future HIA were defined. HIA should be systematic; involve decision-makers and affected communities; take into account local factors; use evidence and methods appropriate to the impacts identified and the importance and scope of the policy; and make practical recommendations.


Subject(s)
Health Planning Guidelines , Health Policy , Needs Assessment/organization & administration , Public Housing/statistics & numerical data , Technology Assessment, Biomedical/organization & administration , Transportation/statistics & numerical data , Urban Health/statistics & numerical data , Urban Renewal/organization & administration , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Health , Child , Community Participation , Focus Groups , Forecasting , Humans , Pilot Projects , Poverty , Public Housing/trends , Scotland , Surveys and Questionnaires , Urban Health/trends
19.
Health Educ Q ; 23(3): 293-317, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8841816

ABSTRACT

The purpose of media advocacy is to promote public health goals by using the media to strategically apply pressure for policy change. It provides a framework for moving the public health discussion from a primary focus on the health behavior of individuals to the behavior of the policymakers whose decisions structure the environment in which people act. It addresses the power gap rather than just the information gap. Media advocacy focuses on public policy rather than personal behavior. This article uses two case studies to illustrate key aspects of media advocacy. The first is a 5-year statewide violence prevention initiative for young people in California. The second focuses on the activities of a mothers' group working to improve public housing. The "new public health," with its focus on participation, policy development, and political processes, could benefit from incorporating media advocacy.


Subject(s)
Health Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Promotion/legislation & jurisprudence , Mass Media/legislation & jurisprudence , Adolescent , Adult , California , Community Participation/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Health Planning/legislation & jurisprudence , Health Services Needs and Demand/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Male , Program Evaluation , Public Housing/trends , Violence/legislation & jurisprudence , Violence/prevention & control
20.
J Ment Health Adm ; 21(1): 71-9, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10131891

ABSTRACT

Three studies of perceived residential needs and community residential patterns of adults with severe and persistent mental illness over a period of 12 years are used to assess the effect of changing public policy in this area. During a period in which public policy shifted from advocacy of congregate living in treatment settings to independent living in generic community housing, there were significant changes in community residential patterns and in the attitudes of case managers. Clinical and demographic data collected in the most recent survey provides a much more complete profile of the community living situation of adults with severe and persistent mental illness than was previously available.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Community Mental Health Services/organization & administration , Deinstitutionalization/statistics & numerical data , Health Policy/trends , Public Housing/trends , Community Mental Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Community Mental Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Health Services Needs and Demand/trends , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Mental Disorders/epidemiology , Public Health Administration/trends , Public Housing/statistics & numerical data , Residential Facilities/statistics & numerical data , United States , Vermont
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