Literature DB >> 33041503

Who Belongs?: An Analysis of Ex-Mental Patients' Subjective Involvement in the Neighborhood.

Carol J Silverman1, Steven P Segal2.   

Abstract

What causes people with psychiatric disabilities to feel they belong in their neighborhood? This article examines predictors of belonging for a sample of former psychiatric patients in community settings. The authors consider what differentiates ex-patients who feel they belong in their neighborhoods from those who do not. For the sample as a whole, belonging primarily results from satisfaction with the dwelling. It depends neither on reception by neighbors nor on whether they live in sheltered care. Furthermore, there is nothing about sheltered care (i.e., a supervised residence) that makes people feel less belonging. For long-term sheltered care residents, belonging depends on neighbor relations and ease of arranging activities with house residents.

Entities:  

Year:  1994        PMID: 33041503      PMCID: PMC7544154     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adult Resid Care J        ISSN: 0899-1995


  4 in total

Review 1.  Attitudes toward the mentally ill: a review.

Authors:  S P Segal
Journal:  Soc Work       Date:  1978-05

2.  An overview of surveys of mental health consumers' preferences for housing and support services.

Authors:  B Tanzman
Journal:  Hosp Community Psychiatry       Date:  1993-05

3.  Community acceptance of the mentally ill in foster family care.

Authors:  S R Sherman; E S Newman; E R Frenkel
Journal:  Health Soc Work       Date:  1984

4.  The Survival of Sheltered Care Homes: Facility and Neighborhood Contributions.

Authors:  Steven P Segal; Carol J Silverman
Journal:  Adult Resid Care J       Date:  1993
  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  Differences in Daily Hassle Patterns Among California's Seriously Mentally Ill Sheltered Care Residents.

Authors:  Steven P Segal; Debra J VanderVoort
Journal:  Adult Resid Care J       Date:  1996
  1 in total

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