| Literature DB >> 33386531 |
Ronald J Gurrera1,2, Darryl Grosso3.
Abstract
Hospital and residential treatment bed utilization rates were measured before and after foster home placement in individuals with serious mental illness. Medical records of all Veterans consecutively enrolled in a Department of Veterans Affairs Community Residential Care (CRC) program during a 6 year period (N = 140) were reviewed retrospectively. Treatment bed days were tabulated by bed type (psychiatric hospital, inpatient detoxification, medical hospital, physical rehabilitation, and psychosocial residential treatment) for each patient during symmetric pre- and post-placement time intervals. Pre- and post-placement bed days were compared using the paired-sample t test in a naturalistic one-group pretest-posttest analytic design. Psychiatric hospital and residential treatment bed days were significantly reduced post-placement (-77.5% and -99.8%, respectively). Most patients (89.0%) had fewer psychiatric hospital bed days post-placement, and all patients with pre-placement residential treatment program bed days had fewer of those days post-placement. Longer CRC placements were associated with greater reductions in bed utilization.Entities:
Keywords: Community integration; Foster care; Health services utilization; Recovery; Serious mental illness; Supportive community residence
Year: 2021 PMID: 33386531 DOI: 10.1007/s10597-020-00758-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Community Ment Health J ISSN: 0010-3853