Newman S J
Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies, Baltimore, MD 21218.
Hosp Community Psychiatry. 1994 Apr;45(4):338-43. doi: 10.1176/ps.45.4.338.
This study compared the housing and neighborhood conditions of persons with serious mental illness with those of the general population.
Data were derived from two surveys: the Community Care Survey administered in 1988-1989 in Baltimore, Maryland, and in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, as part of the national evaluation of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Program on Chronic Mental Illness and the American Housing Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau for the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Persons with serious mental illness generally have worse housing and neighborhood circumstances than the overall population. Persons with serious mental illness typically had housing cost burdens that were significantly higher than the general population; their dwellings and neighborhoods often had higher rates of physical deficiencies and other problems, especially crime.
Although the relationship between the well-being of seriously mentally ill persons and the condition of their housing and neighborhood has not been established definitively, the results of this study suggest that many persons with serious mental illness are not now achieving adequate housing and its associated benefits.
本研究比较了患有严重精神疾病者与普通人群的住房及邻里环境状况。
数据来源于两项调查:1988 - 1989年在马里兰州巴尔的摩、俄亥俄州辛辛那提和哥伦布进行的社区护理调查,作为对罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会慢性精神疾病项目的全国评估的一部分;以及美国人口普查局为住房和城市发展部进行的美国住房调查。
患有严重精神疾病者的住房和邻里环境通常比总体人群更差。患有严重精神疾病者的住房成本负担通常显著高于普通人群;他们的住所和邻里往往存在更高比例的物质缺陷和其他问题,尤其是犯罪问题。
尽管患有严重精神疾病者的福祉与其住房及邻里环境状况之间的关系尚未明确确立,但本研究结果表明,许多患有严重精神疾病者目前并未获得适当的住房及其相关福利。