Reducing hospitalisation among people living with severe mental illness

Australian Health Review : a Publication of the Australian Hospital Association
Shannon McDermottJane Bullen

Abstract

Objective People with severe mental illness have high rates of hospitalisation. The present study examined the role that permanent housing and recovery-oriented support can play in reducing the number and length of psychiatric hospital admissions for people with severe mental illness. Methods The study examined de-identified, individual-level health records of 197 people involved in the New South Wales Mental Health Housing and Accommodation Support Initiative (HASI) to compare changes in hospitalisation over a continuous 4-year period. Results On average, HASI consumers experienced significant reductions in the number of psychiatric hospital admissions and length of stay after entering the HASI program, and these reductions were sustained over the first 2 years in HASI. Male consumers and consumers under 45 years of age experienced the largest reductions in the number and length of hospital admissions. Conclusions The findings of the present study add support to the hypothesis that supported housing and recovery-oriented support can be effective approaches to reducing hospital admissions for people with chronic mental illness, and that these changes can be sustained over time. What is known about this topic? People living with...Continue Reading

References

Oct 5, 2002·Psychiatric Services : a Journal of the American Psychiatric Association·Kim T MueserMarvin I Herz
May 31, 2007·The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research·Susan V EisenAvron Spiro
Jun 26, 2007·American Journal of Community Psychology·John SylvestreSarah Peddle
Jun 15, 2012·The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry·Vera A MorganSuzy Saw

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Citations

Jan 25, 2018·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Peter McPhersonHelen Killaspy

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