| February
1, 2005
More Homeless Mentally Ill Than Expected
According To UCSD Study; Interventions Urged
By Sue Pondrom
The prevalence of homelessness
in persons with serious mental illness in San Diego County,
the nation’s sixth largest metropolitan area, is 15 percent
– a higher percentage than suggested in previous studies,
according to new research by investigators at the UCSD School
of Medicine.
Published in the February
2005 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, the study
noted that homelessness in this population might potentially
be reduced or prevented with substance abuse treatment and help
in obtaining public-funded health benefits (Medicaid, or MediCal
in California). Because homeless mentally ill were more than
twice as likely to be hospitalized as non-homeless patients,
the investigators said improved care for homeless persons with
serious mental illness may be cost effective or at least result
in improved patient outcomes with only moderate increases in
total costs.
The research was conducted
among an ethnically diverse population of 10,340 San Diegans
with serious mental illness (both homeless and those with housing)
who were treated by San Diego County Adult Mental Health Services
(AMHS). While one-fourth to one-third of homeless persons are
estimated to have a serious mental illness, this is one of the
first studies to document and describe the other side of the
picture – the number of mentally ill who are homeless.
“Homelessness
is more common in patients with serious mental illness than
I would have guessed,” said the study’s first author,
David Folsom, M.D., co-director of the UCSD Combined Family
Medicine-Psychiatry Residency Program and the assistant medical
director of St. Vincent de Paul Village’s Family Health
Center, a free medical clinic located in one of San Diego’s
largest homeless service agencies.
According to the UCSD
researchers, homelessness was most frequently associated with
people who were diagnosed with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder,
who were substance abusers, and who had no public-funded health
care. Men were also more likely to be homeless than women, as
were African Americans. Latinos and Asian Americans were less
likely to be homeless.*
“Homelessness
is an increasingly important public health issue, with seriously
mentally ill persons most at risk for homelessness,” said
the study’s senior author, Dilip Jeste, M.D., UCSD Estelle
and Edgar Levi Chair in Aging, professor of psychiatry and neurosciences,
director of the UCSD Sam and Rose Stein Institute for Research
on Aging, and a geriatric psychiatrist at the VA San Diego Healthcare
System. “In addition to the trauma experienced by these
individuals, there is also a cost to society. Homeless persons
have a significantly more-frequent use of expensive emergency
services** and are more likely to spend more
time in jail.”
The study noted that
in San Diego, African Americans comprise 5 percent of the general
population, 11 percent of the AMHS population with serious mental
illness, and 16 percent of the homeless patients with serious
mental illness treated in AMHS. Latinos contribute 23 percent
of the general population, 19 percent of the AMHS patients,
and 12 percent of the homeless.
“It is possible
that the higher rate of homelessness among African Americans
may be in part due to fewer community resources for this group
of patients, whereas the larger Latino community may be able
to provide more resources to protect against homelessness,”
the study said. “However, African Americans have been
found to be at higher risk of homelessness in other cities with
larger African American populations, such as New York and Philadelphia***.”
The authors also said
that an investigation of homeless persons in Los Angeles, only
some of whom had mental illness, found lower rates of homelessness
in Caucasians and Latinos than in African Americans.
Noting that treatment
for substance abuse has been reported to improve outcomes, the
researchers said “access to substance abuse treatment
is more difficult for homeless persons with serious mental illness
than for other homeless persons. Similarly, patients who did
not have MediCal insurance were twice as likely to be homeless
as patients with MediCal; homeless persons with psychotic disorders
have been reported to have greater difficulty obtaining and
maintaining entitlement benefits than non-psychotic homeless
persons.”
The authors concluded
that “although it would be naïve to assume that treatment
for substance use disorders and provision of MediCal insurance
could solve the problem of homelessness among persons with serious
mental illness, further research is warranted to test the effect
of interventions designed to treat dually diagnosed patients
and to assist homeless persons with SMI obtain and maintain
entitlement benefits.”
The study was funded
by the National Institute of Mental Health and by the Department
of Veterans Affairs. Additional authors were William Hawthorne,
Ph.D., Laurie Lindamer, Ph.D., Todd Gilmer, Ph.D., Anne Bailey,
M.S., Shahrokh Golshan, Ph.D., Piedad Garcia, Ed.D., Jurgen
Unutzer, M.D., and Richard Hough, Ph.D.
Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
# #
* Patients
with schizophrenia were 2.4 times more likely, and those with
bipolar disorder 1.6 times more likely to be homeless than those
with major depression. Substance users were more than 4 times
as likely to be homeless as non-users. Homelessness was twice
as common among patients lacking MediCal insurance compared
to MediCal beneficiaries.
** see
http://health.ucsd.edu/news/2004/04_01_Jeste.html
(previous study)
The current study found that homeless patients were 10 times
more likely to use crisis residential treatment and 4 times
more likely to use inpatient psychiatric hospitalization than
non-homeless persons.
*** American
Journal of Public Health, 1995, 85:1153-1156; American Journal
of Public Health 1994, 84:265-270; and Psychiatric Services
1997, 48:390-392
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