Rosenheck Robert, Kasprow Wesley, Frisman Linda, Liu-Mares Wen
Veterans Affairs Northeast Program Evaluation Center-West Haven and Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2003 Sep;60(9):940-51. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.60.9.940.
Supported housing, integrating clinical and housing services, is a widely advocated intervention for homeless people with mental illness. In 1992, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) established the HUD-VA Supported Housing (HUD-VASH) program.
Homeless veterans with psychiatric and/or substance abuse disorders or both (N = 460) were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: (1) HUD-VASH, with Section 8 vouchers (rent subsidies) and intensive case management (n = 182); (2) case management only, without special access to Section 8 vouchers (n = 90); and (3) standard VA care (n = 188) Primary outcomes were days housed and days homeless. Secondary outcomes were mental health status, community adjustment, and costs from 4 perspectives.
During a 3-year follow-up, HUD-VASH veterans had 16% more days housed than the case management-only group and 25% more days housed than the standard care group (P<.001 for both). The case management-only group had only 7% more days housed than the standard care group (P =.29). The HUD-VASH group also experienced 35% and 36% fewer days homeless than each of the control groups (P<.005 for both). There were no significant differences on any measures of psychiatric or substance abuse status or community adjustment, although HUD-VASH clients had larger social networks. From the societal perspective, HUD-VASH was 6200 US dollars (15%) more costly than standard care. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios suggest that HUD-VASH cost 45 US dollars more than standard care for each additional day housed (95% confidence interval, -19 US dollars to 108 US dollars).
Supported housing for homeless people with mental illness results in superior housing outcomes than intensive case management alone or standard care and modestly increases societal costs.
支持性住房将临床服务与住房服务相结合,是一种被广泛提倡的针对患有精神疾病的无家可归者的干预措施。1992年,美国住房和城市发展部(HUD)与美国退伍军人事务部(VA)设立了HUD-VA支持性住房(HUD-VASH)项目。
患有精神疾病和/或物质使用障碍或两者皆有的无家可归退伍军人(N = 460)被随机分配到3组中的1组:(1)HUD-VASH组,提供第8节住房券(租金补贴)和强化个案管理(n = 182);(2)仅接受个案管理组,无法特别获得第8节住房券(n = 90);(3)标准VA护理组(n = 188)。主要结局指标是有住房天数和无家可归天数。次要结局指标是心理健康状况、社区适应情况以及从4个角度衡量的成本。
在3年的随访期间,HUD-VASH组的退伍军人有住房天数比仅接受个案管理组多16%,比标准护理组多25%(两者P均<0.001)。仅接受个案管理组的有住房天数比标准护理组仅多7%(P = 0.29)。HUD-VASH组的无家可归天数也比每个对照组分别少35%和36%(两者P<0.005)。在任何精神疾病或物质使用状况或社区适应的衡量指标上均无显著差异,尽管HUD-VASH组的服务对象有更大的社交网络。从社会角度来看,HUD-VASH比标准护理成本高6200美元(15%)。增量成本效益比表明,HUD-VASH每多一天有住房的成本比标准护理高45美元(95%置信区间,-19美元至108美元)。
为患有精神疾病的无家可归者提供支持性住房比单独的强化个案管理或标准护理能带来更好的住房结局,且适度增加社会成本。