Zippay Allison L
Department of Social Work, Rutgers University, 536 George Street, New Brunswick, NJ 08903, USA.
Psychiatr Serv. 2007 Jan;58(1):109-13. doi: 10.1176/ps.2007.58.1.109.
Federal legislation has given mental health agencies the authority to forego notifying neighbors when establishing shared, supervised houses and apartments for individuals with severe mental illness, but many continue to notify neighbors in the belief that outreach enhances community integration. This study examined the associations between notification strategies and initial neighborhood opposition and longer-term neighborhood relations.
Telephone interviews were conducted with 169 mental health administrators in seven states who described the notification strategy and short- and long-term neighborhood responses to their most recently established shared, supervised residence. Additional data on neighborhood relations were collected in interviews with 138 staff who worked on site at the residences described by the mental health administrators.
Just under half of the agencies used a strategy that involved notification of neighbors, and those organizations were significantly more likely to experience initial opposition (59% of notifiers experienced opposition compared with 35% of non-notifiers). Those who notified neighbors were more likely to initiate activities such as an open house with neighbors after the site was established. There were no significant associations between current neighborhood attitudes and initial notification strategies or initial opposition. Agencies that initiated postsiting social activities with neighbors were significantly more likely to report "very accepting" attitudes.
Administrators who use notification may experience higher levels of initial opposition, but longer-term neighborhood relations may not vary significantly regardless of whether neighbors were notified or whether initial opposition was present. Some agency-sponsored postsiting activities may facilitate substantive connections with neighbors.
联邦立法赋予心理健康机构在为重度精神疾病患者建立共享、受监管的房屋和公寓时无需通知邻居的权力,但许多机构仍继续通知邻居,因为他们认为这种外展活动能促进社区融合。本研究考察了通知策略与邻里的初始反对态度以及长期邻里关系之间的关联。
对七个州的169名心理健康管理人员进行了电话访谈,他们描述了通知策略以及邻里对其最近建立的共享、受监管住所的短期和长期反应。在对138名在心理健康管理人员所描述的住所现场工作的工作人员的访谈中,收集了关于邻里关系的其他数据。
略少于一半的机构采用了通知邻居的策略,这些组织更有可能遭遇初始反对(59%的通知者遭遇反对,而非通知者为35%)。那些通知了邻居的机构在住所建立后更有可能开展诸如与邻居举办开放日等活动。当前邻里态度与初始通知策略或初始反对之间没有显著关联。与邻居开展住所设立后社交活动的机构更有可能报告“非常接纳”的态度。
采用通知策略的管理人员可能会遭遇更高程度的初始反对,但无论是否通知了邻居或是否存在初始反对,长期邻里关系可能并无显著差异。一些机构发起的住所设立后活动可能有助于与邻居建立实质性联系。