J
Nerv Ment Dis 1995 Aug;183(8):529-37
Race in the treatment of homeless mentally ill veterans.
Leda C, Rosenheck R.
Northeast Program Evaluation Center, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center West Haven, Connecticut 06516, USA.
A multi-site descriptive outcome study examined differences between black
and white veterans in admission characteristics, program participation,
and outcomes following an episode of treatment in a Veterans Affairs residential
program for homeless veterans with psychiatric and substance abuse problems.
Admission, discharge, and 6-month and 12-month postdischarge follow-up
data were collected on 119 black and 144 white veterans admitted to the
Domiciliary Care for Homeless Veterans Program at three sites. Chi-square
tests and t-tests were used to identify differences between racial groups
at admission. Factorial repeated-measures analysis of covariance was then
used to identify differences between black and white veterans in improvement,
controlling for differences that were significant at the time of admission.
On but were less likely than whites to have clinical diagnoses of alcohol
abuse or a serious psychiatric disorder, and had fewer suicide attempts.
They also had more social contacts and had more frequently experienced
a recent disruption in an important relationship. Few differences were
found between the two racial groups in measures of program participation.
One year after discharge, both black and white veterans had improved in
virtually all domains. Black veterans showed greater improvement in medical
symptomatology, social contacts, and violence, while white veterans showed
a greater increase in outpatient health service use. While both black
and white veterans benefitted from participation in residential treatment,
the data suggest that blacks were more likely to re-establish previously
disrupted social ties while whites increased their involvement in the
VA health care system.
PMID: 7643065 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]