Cost-effectiveness of supported housing for homeless persons with mental illness.

BACKGROUND Supported housing, integrating clinical and housing services, is a widely advocated intervention for homeless people with mental illness. In 1992, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) established the HUD-VA Supported Housing (HUD-VASH) program. METHODS Homeless veterans with psychiatric and/or substance abuse disorders or both (N = 460) were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 groups: (1) HUD-VASH, with Section 8 vouchers (rent subsidies) and intensive case management (n = 182); (2) case management only, without special access to Section 8 vouchers (n = 90); and (3) standard VA care (n = 188) Primary outcomes were days housed and days homeless. Secondary outcomes were mental health status, community adjustment, and costs from 4 perspectives. RESULTS During a 3-year follow-up, HUD-VASH veterans had 16% more days housed than the case management-only group and 25% more days housed than the standard care group (P<.001 for both). The case management-only group had only 7% more days housed than the standard care group (P =.29). The HUD-VASH group also experienced 35% and 36% fewer days homeless than each of the control groups (P<.005 for both). There were no significant differences on any measures of psychiatric or substance abuse status or community adjustment, although HUD-VASH clients had larger social networks. From the societal perspective, HUD-VASH was 6200 US dollars (15%) more costly than standard care. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios suggest that HUD-VASH cost 45 US dollars more than standard care for each additional day housed (95% confidence interval, -19 US dollars to 108 US dollars). CONCLUSIONS Supported housing for homeless people with mental illness results in superior housing outcomes than intensive case management alone or standard care and modestly increases societal costs.

[1]  A T McLellan,et al.  An Improved Diagnostic Evaluation Instrument for Substance Abuse Patients: The Addiction Severity Index , 1980, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[2]  Neil Bruce,et al.  Public finance and the American economy , 1997 .

[3]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Shifting to outpatient care? Mental health care use and cost under private insurance. , 1999, The American journal of psychiatry.

[4]  A. Sen,et al.  Inequality Re-examined , 1995 .

[5]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Cost-effectiveness of clozapine in patients with high and low levels of hospital use. Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study Group on Clozapine in Refractory Schizophrenia. , 1999, Archives of general psychiatry.

[6]  J. Robins,et al.  Correcting for Noncompliance and Dependent Censoring in an AIDS Clinical Trial with Inverse Probability of Censoring Weighted (IPCW) Log‐Rank Tests , 2000, Biometrics.

[7]  M. Johannesson,et al.  Theory and methods of economic evaluation of health care. , 1996, Developments in health economics and public policy.

[8]  R. Hough,et al.  Effects of substance abuse on housing stability of homeless mentally Ill persons in supported housing. , 1996, Psychiatric services.

[9]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Issues in estimating the cost of innovative mental health programs , 2005, Psychiatric Quarterly.

[10]  Bernie J. O'Brien,et al.  In Search of Power and Significance: Issues in the Design and Analysis of Stochastic Cost-Effectiveness Studies in Health Care , 1994, Medical care.

[11]  C. Hultman,et al.  Case managed residential care for homeless addicted veterans. Results of a true experiment. , 1998, Medical care.

[12]  L. Seidman,et al.  Housing placement and subsequent days homeless among formerly homeless adults with mental illness. , 1999, Psychiatric services.

[13]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Time-limited assertive community treatment for homeless persons with severe mental illness. , 2001, Archives of general psychiatry.

[14]  H. Goldman,et al.  The alchemy of mental health policy: homelessness and the fourth cycle of reform. , 1985, American journal of public health.

[15]  M. Pauly Valuing health care: Valuing health care benefits in money terms , 1995 .

[16]  J. Reschovsky,et al.  The effects of independent living on persons with chronic mental illness: an assessment of the Section 8 certificate program. , 1994, The Milbank quarterly.

[17]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  From Clinical Trials to Real-World Practice: Use of Atypical Antipsychotic Medication Nationally in the Department of Veterans Affairs , 2001, Medical care.

[18]  A A Stinnett,et al.  Net Health Benefits , 1998, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[19]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Effectiveness and cost of specific treatment elements in a program for homeless mentally ill veterans. , 1995, Psychiatric services.

[20]  M. Feldstein Tax Avoidance and the Deadweight Loss of the Income Tax , 1995, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[21]  A. Horvath,et al.  Development and validation of the Working Alliance Inventory. , 1989 .

[22]  R. Smith,et al.  Experimental comparison of the effects of three treatment programs for homeless mentally ill people. , 1992, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[23]  Anthony S. Bryk,et al.  Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods , 1992 .

[24]  C. Weisner,et al.  Integrating primary medical care with addiction treatment: a randomized controlled trial. , 2001, JAMA.

[25]  Michael Cahill,et al.  Housing and urban development , 2018, The Environment and Social Policy.

[26]  A. Lovell,et al.  Serving street-dwelling individuals with psychiatric disabilities: outcomes of a psychiatric rehabilitation clinical trial. , 2000, American journal of public health.

[27]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Service systems integration and outcomes for mentally ill homeless persons in the ACCESS program. Access to Community Care and Effective Services and Supports. , 2002, Psychiatric services.

[28]  A. Vaux,et al.  Social support appraisals and network resources , 1987 .

[29]  J. Lam,et al.  Social Support and Service Use Among Homeless Persons With Serious Mental Illness , 1999, The International journal of social psychiatry.

[30]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Cost-effectiveness of services for mentally ill homeless people: the application of research to policy and practice. , 2000, The American journal of psychiatry.

[31]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Street outreach for homeless persons with serious mental illness: is it effective? , 1999, Medical care.

[32]  Dennis P. Culhane,et al.  Public service reductions associated with placement of homeless persons with severe mental illness in supportive housing , 2002 .

[33]  A F Lehman,et al.  A randomized trial of assertive community treatment for homeless persons with severe mental illness. , 1997, Archives of general psychiatry.

[34]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  How transfer payments are treated in cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit analyses , 1996, Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research.

[35]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Therapeutic alliance and outcome in a VA intensive case management program. , 1995, Psychiatric services.

[36]  E. Susser,et al.  A critical time intervention with mentally ill homeless men: impact on psychiatric symptoms. , 2000, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[37]  A. Briggs,et al.  Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue: a framework for the marriage of health econometrics and cost-effectiveness analysis. , 2002, Health economics.

[38]  A. Lehman,et al.  A Quality of Life Interview for the chronically mentally ill. , 1988 .

[39]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Buprenorphine for opiate addiction: potential economic impact. , 2001, Drug and alcohol dependence.

[40]  F. R. Lipton,et al.  Housing the homeless mentally ill: a longitudinal study of a treatment approach. , 1988, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[41]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Outcomes after initial receipt of social security benefits among homeless veterans with mental illness. , 2000, Psychiatric services.

[42]  M. Dewan,et al.  Are psychiatrists cost-effective? An analysis of integrated versus split treatment. , 1999, The American journal of psychiatry.

[43]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Improving access to disability benefits among homeless persons with mental illness: an agency-specific approach to services integration. , 1999, American journal of public health.

[44]  E. Susser,et al.  Preventing recurrent homelessness among mentally ill men: a "critical time" intervention after discharge from a shelter. , 1997, American journal of public health.

[45]  C. L. Black A new birth of freedom : human rights, named and unnamed , 1997 .

[46]  L. Stein,et al.  Assertive Community Treatment of Persons with Severe Mental Illness , 1998 .

[47]  C. Leda,et al.  Initial assessment data from a 43-site program for homeless chronic mentally ill veterans. , 1989, Hospital & community psychiatry.

[48]  R. Rosenheck,et al.  Referral and housing processes in a long-term supported housing program for homeless veterans. , 2000, Psychiatric services.

[49]  M. Mcgrath Cost Effectiveness in Health and Medicine. , 1998 .