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Social integration and social support in a life crisis: Effects of macrosocial change in east Germany
Authors:Gary A. Morse  Robert J. Calsyn  Gary Allen  David A. Kenny
Affiliation:(1) Missouri Institute of Mental Health, Missowri, USA;(2) University of Connecticut, Connecticut, USA;(3) University of Missouri-St. Louis, 406 Tower, 8001 Natural Bridge Road, 63121-4499 St. Louis, Missouri
Abstract:
This process evaluation study examined what variables moderate and mediate treatment effects on days in stable housing and client satisfaction for homeless mentally ill clients. In general, demographic characteristics did not moderate either outcome variable. Housing contacts, entitlement contacts, mental health contacts, and supportive services were significant mediators of the treatment effect on days in stable housing. Program contacts, mental health contacts, and supportive services were significant mediators of client satisfaction. The authors thank the National Institute of Mental Health for their financial support (MH43248, MH42357) for this project, Dorothy Gano for word processing and editorial assistance, and Gitry Heydebrand, Melissa Dannelet, Betty Tempelhoff, Ruth Smith, and Laeeq Ahmad for assisting in the interviews of clients. We are also appreciative of the cooperation given to us by the staffs of Malcolm Bliss Mental Health Center, St. Patrick's Center, the Community Advocacy and Support Alliance Program, and the St. Louisemergency shelters. Finally, we thank all of the participants in this study; we hope that their homelessness has now ended. (The conclusions presented in this paper are the sole responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect official National Institute for Mental Health policy.)
Keywords:homeless mentally ill  client satisfaction  stable housing  mediating and moderating variables  case management
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