Determinants of community integration among formerly homeless veterans who received supportive housing

Melissa Chinchilla, Sonya Gabrielian, Gerhard Hellemann, Amy Glasmeier, Michael Green

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Community integration is recognized as a meaningful goal that is highly relevant to the long-term success of supportive housing programs. Research to date highlights concerns that some individuals in permanent supportive housing remain socially isolated and have limited success in other domains of community integration. However, we know little about what factors impact formerly homeless veterans' ability to achieve community integration. To identify factors associated with community integration among homeless veterans housed through the Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA's) Supportive Housing program (HUD-VASH), we performed secondary database analyses of Veterans (n = 560) housed via HUD-VASH in the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System from 10/1/14-9/30/15. We conducted ordinal and logit regressions to examine associations between baseline HUD-VASH participant characteristics, supportive housing voucher type, health service utilization in the year post-housing, and three types of community integration outcomes (i.e., change in community adjustment, status of housing stability, and change in employment). Data were obtained from HOMES (VA's homeless registry) and Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW) (VA's a national administrative dataset of VA inpatient and outpatient care). Mental health service utilization was negatively associated with community adjustment, housing stability, and employment. Employment at baseline was positively associated with housing stability and employment. Also, substance use disorder visits was positively associated with employment, and combined medical and substance use disorder diagnoses was positively associated with change in community adjustment. We considered 29 variables and found relatively few were associated with community integration. Consistent with previous research, our study highlights the importance of mental health needs, and suggests that utilization of mental health services is an important indicator of improvements in community adjustment, housing stability, and employment.

Original languageEnglish
Article number472
JournalFrontiers in Psychiatry
Volume10
Issue numberJUN
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Chinchilla, Gabrielian, Hellemann, Glasmeier and Green.

Funding

Financial support was provided by Lynne Sagalyn and Gary Hack Department of Urban Studies and Planning Fund at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Greater Los Angeles Veteran Affairs Research Enhancement Award Program on Enhancing Community Integration for Homeless Veterans. Dr. Chinchilla was supported by the VA Office of Academic Affiliations through the Health Service Research and Development Post-Doctoral Fellowship. The contents do not represent the views of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs or the United States Government.

FundersFunder number
Health Service Research and Development
Lynne Sagalyn and Gary Hack Department of Urban Studies and Planning Fund
VA Office of Academic Affiliations
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Health Services Research and Development
Office of Academic Affiliations, Department of Veterans Affairs

    Keywords

    • Community integration
    • Homelessness
    • Physical integration
    • Social integration
    • Supportive housing
    • Veterans

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