The paper also reviews the empirical literature on homelessness and case management, especially as it relates to treatment effectiveness and critical factors. Several conclusions are postulated, including that some case management approaches, especially assertive community treatment (ACT), are effective for helping people who are homeless with severe mental illness; frequent service contact is a critical ingredient leading to positive treatment retention and housing outcomes; case management is more effective with some clients than others. A number of gaps in our knowledge of case management are also identified.
The final section of the paper presents recommendations on exemplary practices. These include recommendations related to critical staff skills and abilities, service principles, case management models, and organizational practices.
Why have case management services been recommended and implemented so frequently in the area of homelessness? In part, there is a general zeitgeist of case management within human services. More specifically, however, the initial development of case management services has resulted in part from several interrelated, key assumptions about the problems, causes, and solutions of homelessness:
An additional set of beliefs about people who are homeless also facilitated the development of case management programs. Specifically, homeless people have often been described as markedly mistrustful and suspicious of service providers, and to highly value their autonomy (e.g., Francis & Goldfinger, 1986). Case managers have been conceptualized as workers whose first task is to engage people who are homeless, developing and nurturing trust and a working alliance (Francis & Goldfinger, 1986).
While compelling arguments have been for case management services, significant questions and concerns have also arisen. Confusion about exactly what constitutes case management has been common. Others have questioned the effectiveness of case management.
The remainder of this paper will attend to these and related issues. Specifically, the following sections will:
The description of functions helps to provide more specificity to the definition of case management. However, as Bachrach (1992) noted in the broader area of mental health services, there is still a lack of consensus about the precise meaning of case management (p. 209; see also Rog et al., 1996). In part, this results from the practice of a number of different models or approaches to providing case management. Different case management models generally (but not always) perform the primary functions identified above; however, they vary not only in the presence or absence of the additional functions listed above, but also in other important ways. Especially important are the operational or process characteristics of case management programs, which Willenbring and colleagues distinguish from the functions of case management. The process characteristics measure more how case management services operate, rather than what they do. The following list of seven process variables, selected and modified from Willenbring and colleagues, are relevant for understanding similarities and differences between specific case management services.
Severe Mental Illness
As shown in Table 1, intensive case management (ICM) approaches (see Rog et al., 1987) have been widely used with a variety of homeless subpopulations, including people with substance abuse disorders, homeless families, and especially with people with severe mental illnesses. ICM is illustrative of an approach that has emerged from the field in the absence of an extensive, preexisting theoretical or research basis. Its popularity for homeless clients has in part probably arisen from clinical principlesassertive and persistent outreach, reduced case loads, active assistance in accessing needed resourcesthat are compelling given the nature of clients needs and system characteristics. Not surprisingly, however, ICM approaches are sometimes mentioned without extensive description of their programmatic functions or process characteristics. Further, the comparability of ICM across programs or homeless subgroups is unclear and questionable; there appears to be significant operational differences across ICM programs but these are often not systematically described or assessed.
Assertive community treatment (ACT) programs represent another common approach for homeless people with serious mental illness. (For this review, the ACT approach is meant to encompass programs identified in the literature as Continuous Treatment Teams or CTTs. The terms ACT and CTT are sometimes may represent subtle programmatic differences but often in practice and research they are synonymous terms, or indistinguishable from one another.) The ACT model has been highly researched and well-established as an effective community-based intervention for non-homeless people with severe mental illness (see Stein & Test, 1985; Burns & Santos, 1995). It has also been widely disseminated throughout a number of states as a model program for some people with severe mental illness (Deci et al, 1995). ACT proponents eschew the term case management (e.g., Stein, 1992); despite the validity of these objections, ACT is often included within reviews of case management and will be considered within this rubric in this paper as well. The model does indeed differ significantly from many case management approaches, especially in its emphasis on direct treatment and services, shared caseloads, and use of an interdisciplinary team that includes specialists such as psychiatrists and nurses.
The ACT model has been adapted in various ways to improve its relevance to a homeless population. These adaptations parallel many of the principles followed by homeless outreach and ICM programs; they include assertive outreach, engagement strategies, and an increased emphasis on clients resource and housing needs (Dixon et al., 1995; Morse et al., 1992). Investigators have also added new innovations to the basic ACT model by adding both adjunct lay citizen community workers (Morse et al., 1997) and mental health consumers (Dixon et al., 1994) to the treatment team. Despite these modifications, one advantage to the ACT approach is its clarity and specificity in program principles, functions, and operations. The model is well described, and researchers have developed an instrument to measure the degree of fidelity of any one program to the ideal ACT program (McGrew & Bond, 1995; Teague et al., 1998). ACT teams for homeless clients with severe mental illness have recently been widely promoted and replicated through the CMHS ACCESS program (Johnsen, Samberg, Calsyn, Blasinsky, Landow, & Goldman, 1998).
A review of the literature (see also Table 1) suggests that a number of other case management approaches have also been developed for homeless people with serious mental illness. In addition to ICM and ACT approaches, two additional models are Clinical Case Management and Social Network Case Management. Both provide sound theoretical justifications for their clinical and social network components, respectively, while also incorporating basic ICM principles and characteristics. At present, however, neither model appears to be widely practiced.
The Strengths Model is often advocated and implemented for the broad (non-homeless) population of people with severe mental illness (Rapp, 1993). Features of this model include a focus on the environment as well as the individual client, use of paraprofessional staff, emphasis on client strengths rather than deficits, and a priority placed on following client directed interventions. The Strengths Model has recently been implemented in a large demonstration for homeless clients in Kansas under the ACCESS grant (Johnsen et al., 1988).
The Critical Time Intervention (CTI) is a new approach developed and tested for people who are homeless with severe mental illness (Susser, Valencia, Conover, Felix, Tsai, and Wyatt, 1997). The CTI approach focuses upon strengthening a persons long-term ties to other services and supports while providing emotional and practical support during the critical period of a transition from shelter to housing.
Also appearing within the literature are approaches which are noteworthy for their use of consumers as case management staff. The use of consumers and peers has been incorporated within various models of case management, including homeless ACT teams that include a consumer advocate (Dixon et al, 1994) and ACT teams which are almost exclusively comprised of consumer staff (see Herinckx, Kinney, Clarke, & Paulson, 1997). Consumer Case Management approaches have advocacy support, offer important work roles for former patients, and may be helpful for engaging clients suspicious of traditional mental health providers.
Finally, Broker Case Management approaches, meanwhile, are also commonly provided. Broker models emphasize assessment, planning, referral, and monitoring functions without extensive outreach, linkage or direct service contacts. While common, they are not recommended for homeless clients (Morse, Calsyn, Klinkenberg, Trusty, Gerber, Smith, Templehoff, & Ahmad, 1997).
Dual Diagnosis
Many case management programs for homeless people with severe mental illness have also served large number of persons who also have a co-occurring substance abuse disorder. Often, this has been a defacto rather than planned intervention, given the high prevalence of co-occurring substance abuse disorders among homeless people with severe mental illness (Federal Task Force on Homelessness and Severe Mental Illness, 1992). More recently, there have been increased efforts to address the specialized needs and problems of people with these dual diagnoses, especially among the non-homeless dually diagnosed population (e.g., Durell, Lechtenberg, Corse, & Frances, 1993; Jansen, Masterton, Norwood, & Viventi, 1992; Jerrell & Ridgely, 1995; Osher & Kofoed, 1989; Young & Grella, 1998). These services often follow the principles of Integrated Treatment (e.g., Mercer, Mueser, & Drake, 1998; Minkoff & Drake, 1991), which focuses upon an interdisciplinary, concurrent treatment approach to substance abuse, mental health, and other related client needs. A recent review of the treatment outcome research for all dually diagnosed clients recommended that integrated treatment approaches be comprehensive and incorporate assertive outreach, case management, individual and group and family interventions, while assuming a longitudinal, step-wise motivational enhancement approach to substance abuse treatment (Drake, Mercer-McFadden, Mueser, McHugo, & Bond, in press).
There have been relatively few case management interventions for dually diagnosed homeless persons, although there is a recent trend toward increased program development and research. The literature includes an example of social network therapy/intensive case management which promotes referral and linkage to existing substance abuse treatment providers rather than integrated treatment (Kline, Harris, Bebout, & Drake, 1991). Additional publications describe integrated treatment-case management approaches for homeless clients. Blankertz and White (1990) described a model of case management incorporated within a residential program for dually diagnosed homeless clients. In this model, case managers provided initial outreach and engagement, individualized service and rehabilitation planning, linkage for needed resources and services, and facilitated psychoeducational substance abuse treatment groups. Case management services were designed to follow clients whether or not they successfully completed the residential program. Intensive/clinical case management programs (Drake et al., 1997) and ACT programs (Meisler, Blankertz, Santos, & McKay, 1997) have also been modified to incorporate integrated treatment concepts and methods for people who are homeless and dually diagnosed. Additional projects are currently under development and research.
Substance Abuse
Case management is regarded as an important component in substance abuse services but there are few studies specifying program models and elements (see U.S. DHHS, 1992). Similarly, case management approaches have also been recommended and implemented for homeless clients with substance abuse problems, although apparently not with the same frequency as for homeless people with serious mental illness. Notable exceptions were three homeless case management demonstration programs funded by NIAAA. McCarty, Argeriou, Krakow, and Mulvey (1990) designed and described an intensive case management service in Boston as a key component within a stabilization project for homeless people with substance abuse disorders. The intensive case management service was designed to assist clients overcome their distrust of service providers, coordinate needed treatment and support needs, and guide them along the recovery continuum (p. 39). The case management role emphasized linkage and monitoring activities as well as support. Similarly, in the Louisville project, Bonham, Hague, Abel, Cummings, and Deutsch (1990) emphasized the role of intensive case managers in the Louisville project as connecting clients with community resources, especially AA and NA meetings, rather than as direct service provision. The Louisville project followed other common case management practices (e.g., individualized planning, monitoring) while also focusing on the need for outreach. The Minneapolis project, meanwhile, adapted the ACT model to serve homeless people considered as chronic public inebriates (Willenbring, Whelan, Dahlquist, & ONeal, 1990). This team was designed to provide services and continuity of care in addition to conducting assessments, planning, and other common functions. It is important to note that the above descriptions reflect the intended program models; in actual practice, some significant discrepancies occurred (high client to staff ratios, considerable staff turnover, and other implementation problemssee above references as well as Orwin et al., 1994, and Willenbring et al., 1991).
Primary Health
Case management for homeless people has also been recommended as an effective strategy for enhancing and supplementing primary health care services (Savarese et al., 1990; Stephens et al., 1991). In practice, case management has been an important element in Health Care for the Homeless projects across the United States (Savarese et al., Stephens et al). However, few detailed descriptions appear in the literature concerning the specifics of homeless health care case management services. Savarese and colleagues have illustrated how core case management functions have been integrated within normal homeless health care teams activities in a myriad of ways. Stephens and colleagues, meanwhile, also emphasize the integration of case management within a multidisciplinary team, while stressing the importance of a case manager to monitor and broker the system. They also argue that:
health care providers need to focus more on case management activities, which may include activities not necessarily associated with the provision of health care services (for example, finding and providing food, clothing, shelter, and accessing entitlement eligibility) to achieve the ultimate goalstabilizationand when possible, reintegration of the homeless person back into society (p. 15).
Kuczenski (1992), writing about a Health Care for the Homeless project in Minnesota, provides one illustration of how nurses can perform outreach and follow-up home visits to provide support and help clients with parenting and accessing needed resources. Steward (1992), meanwhile, described the role of specialized case managers in the same HCH project in helping homeless people set and keep health appointments, track specialized health information (e.g., immunization records), and access new resources as they transition into stable housing.
In general, however, the literature, lacks detailed models of case management with primary health, especially for specialized client subgroups. Homeless children have been identified as one high risk group in need of intensive case management health services (Roth & Fox, 1990). More attention is also needed for homeless people with poly-disorders, such as mental health, substance abuse, and HIV or AIDS; one such project stresses the importance of case management in creating linkages across multiple systems of care (Brindis, Pfeffer, & Wolfe, 1995). Worley and colleagues (1990) recommendations for integrated approaches for non-homeless people with severe mental illness appear equally applicable to homeless people with severe mental illness. Specifically, case management teams, such as ACT teams, could incorporate psychiatric nurse specialists to perform health screenings, health monitoring, education and disease prevention activities, while performing specialized medical linkage and coordination functions with other providers. Nurse practitioners could also be employed for providing primary care as well medical referral and monitoring.
Homeless Children and Families
Although the literature is very limited, case management services for homeless children and families should be considered on the basis of the specific subgroup targeted for services. Specifically, case management services have been described for young children (Carman, 1991); runaway and homeless youths (Cauce, Morgan, Shantinath, Wagner, Wurzbacher, Tomlin, & Blanchard, 1993; Yates, Pennbridge, Swofford, & Mackenzie, 1991), including pregnant teens (Borgford-Parnell, Hope, & Deisher, 1994); and the entire homeless family (Rog et al., 1996).
Bassuk (1991) noted there is a shortage of innovative programs nationwide for homeless children. The Kidstart Program was developed as a case management model for homeless children by the Better Homes Foundation and IBM (Carman, 1991). There is a special emphasis on case managers engaging and networking the various agencies involved with homeless children (shelters, schools, social services) and in assessing the developmental progress and delays of young homeless children in social, emotional, and cognitive domains. Kidstart incorporates common features of most case management programs including service planning, linkage, and monitoring. Similar to other approaches for homeless people, Kidstart emphasizes personalized and comprehensive care (Bassuk, 1991).
Two programs for runaways and homeless youths implemented intensive case management programs (Borgford-Parnell et al., 1994; Cauce et al., 1993). The program by Cauce and colleagues was guided by a comprehensive focus, recognizing that although many of these youths have mental health problems, their problems do not begin or end there (p. 34). Emphasis was also placed on providing emotional support and nurture, assisting clients to master developmental tasks, active involvement in the multiple systems affecting adolescents, and intervention and support for the utilized social support networks of clients, which often involved peers. The specialized intensive case management program for pregnant homeless teens employed both nurses and social workers (Borgford-Parnell et al., 1994). In addition to providing health and social services the program philosophy stressed outreach and engagement, employing unique strategies . . . to meet the complex and ever changing needs of this difficult-to-serve population (p. 1030), building a trusting relationship, providing services in the field, concrete and active assistance, consistent support, and long-term interventions. Services included health assessments, social service assistance, and skill training and assistance with infant care. In addition to these mobile intensive case management programs, case management services connected with long-term residential shelters have also been developed for homeless teens (Yates et al.).
As Rog and her colleagues (1996) noted, despite its increasing popularity, there has been little explicit study of case managements operations or effectiveness with (homeless) families (p. 68). Rog et al.s description of a joint Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and HUD initiative provides a rare discussion of case management services for homeless families. The project recommended intensive case management for families with intensive support, frequent in vivo contacts, on going services, and close linkages with housing services (Rog et al., 1996).
Treatment Specification and Implementation Evaluations
Programs need to be carefully described and measured in order to understand the nature of the intervention, properly interpret results, and assist replication efforts (e.g., Brekke, 1988). This is especially relevant for case management programs, given the considerable confusion and uncertainty in the field about the meaning of a case management program and since there are rarely pure models in actual practice. It is also important to evaluate how closely an operation measures to an ideal model or the intended program, since negative findings may result from implementation deviations rather than an ineffective model. Unfortunately, however, many case management interventions are poorly described, and fewer are observed or measured (for notable exceptions, see Johnsen et al., 1998; Mercier & Racine, 1991; Rog et al., 1996).
Specifying the treatment and measuring its implementation may reveal surprising if sometimes disturbing insights. Rog and colleagues, for example, found in a large multi-site study that an intervention intended as an intensive case management approach (with frequent client contact) actually only produced an average of 15 hours of direct client services and 15 client contacts during the first year of service. Similarly, First, Rife, & Kraus (1990) found that within a demonstration intensive case management program that 37 percent of the clients received either minimal or no linkage with needed services (p. 90; see also Barrow et al., 1996). Also, Johnsen and colleagues (1998) adapted a standardized instrument measuring the treatment fidelity of six ACT programs and seven modified ACT programs included in the ACCESS demonstration grant. They found, however, several significant deviations from the ideal ACT model (time-limited instead of ongoing service commitment; lack of multidisciplinary staff) and that (n)one of the programs . . . achieved fidelity scores as high as the traditional ACT programs (p. 17).
Treatment Effectiveness
Experimental Studies. All other research variables being constant, the most valid conclusions about the effectiveness of case management services must be derived from experimental studies using random assignment. Table 2 summarizes ten completed randomized studies assessing the effectiveness of case management approaches for homeless people. Note that all ten studies involved homeless clients who had serious mental illness (some persons also had a co-occurring substance abuse disorder).
Eight of the ten studies found that positive client outcomes occurred for the experimental case management approach. In seven of these eight studies, the significant results included less time spent homeless/more days stably housed in the community (the other study measured only treatment engagement and retention and not housing outcomes). Five of the six studies using an ACT approach found positive client outcomes. ACT interventions also sometimes produced other positive outcomes, such as improved service utilization or treatment retention and reduced psychiatric symptoms.
Two of the three intensive (or assertive) case management approaches reported positive outcomes (improved housing and, from one study that included psychosocial rehabilitation services, reduced symptoms). The one study of the CTI approach found positive outcomes on the housing/homelessness variables.
Note that the above paragraph summaries the differential treatment effectiveness of the case management approaches against comparison treatments, which in some cases were other case management program. In addition, several studies reported time effects whereby clients in all conditions improved over time in certain areas, but without differential effectiveness between the experimental case management approach and the comparison services (see Table 2). These improvements over time included positive outcomes in family contacts, life satisfaction, income, self-esteem, and interpersonal adjustment. The use of other treatment comparison groups makes the interpretation of these results unclear. Case managementas well as the comparison conditionsmay in fact be affecting these positive client outcomes, but they are difficult to detect without a no-treatment control group.
Quasi-Experimental Studies. In addition to the experimental studies, some investigators have studied the effects of case management interventions using quasi-experimental designs, including comparison groups without random assignment, simple pre-post-analysis, and retrospective reviews. The findings from such studies, however, should be considered much more cautiously, given a number of possible threats to the validity of the conclusions that are inherent in non-experimental designs (see Cook & Campbell, 1979). Table 3 summarizes eight homeless case management studies (one involved three separate projects) relying upon non-experimental designs or analyses. As shown, four of these studies involved subjects with severe mental illness, three with dually diagnoses subjects, and one (analyzing the three separate NIAAA projects) involved persons with substance abuse disorders.
Three of the four studies involving people with severe mental illness used ICM approaches, the fourth used ACT. The ACT study reported improvements in a number of areas, including in residential stability, social adjustment, vocational functioning, and decreased symptoms. The three ICM studies reported housing rates ranging between 51 percent and 63 percent over one year to 27 months assessment intervals. A relatively high rate (71 percent) of mental health service utilization was reported in one study, but two studies found surprisingly low rates of retention in case management services over time (30 percent in one study, 16 to 57 percent depending upon the criterion in another).
The three studies of services for dually diagnosed clients each integrated substance abuse services into mental services (one project used ACT, the other ICM/social network and clinical case management models and the third a combined residential and case management program.) The ACT and CCM/Social Network studies both reported some positive findings, especially for improved housing stability, but only equivocal or minimal effects for substance abuse. The case management-residential program clients were more likely than comparison clients to achieve successful discharge on a composite variable related to stable housing, abstinence, and absence of rehospitalization; however, the overall rate of success was still low (29 percent to 8 percent).
Orwin and colleagues (1994) reported on three NIAAA-funded research demonstration projects involving case management interventions for homeless people with substance abuse problems. Using multivariate analysis, Orwin et al. found evidence of significant treatment effects for only one intensive case management intervention on housing permanence and independence variables. This same study showed equivocal results and time-limited results on economic, employment, and substance abuse variables. In the other two case management studies, Orwin and colleagues found at best minimal or equivocal results. Orwin et al., however, noted that the absence of more powerful results may have resulted from a number of research design and methodological problems (e.g., differential attrition) or from ineffective or low intensity case management approaches.
Cost-Effectiveness
This review of the literature found only one completed study on the cost-effectiveness of any case management approach for homeless people (Wolff, Helminiak, Morse, Calsyn, Klinkenberg, & Trusty 1997). Wolff and colleagues were able to collect cost data for a subsample of clients involved in the randomized design of three conditions: ACT-only, ACT with community workers, and broker case management (Morse et al., 1997). Results found that there were no significant costs differences between the three programs when a comprehensive cost analysis was conducted although the ACT programs produced better client outcomes (client contact, psychiatric symptoms, and client satisfaction); thus, both ACT interventions were more cost-effective than broker case management.
Critical Factors
Service Factors or Mediators. The research literature provides some support for the proposition that at least certain case management approaches, especially ACT, are effective ways of serving homeless people, especially those with serious mental illness. A subsequent question then arises as to whether there are particular factors that are critical for the success of effective case management interventions. From a research perspective, one of the best and most rigorous methods for answering this question is to conduct process evaluations that use multivariate analyses to specify the mediating variables or critical ingredients that are correlated with positive client outcomes within experimental studies showing positive effects. Unfortunately, very little of this type of research has been conducted in this field. Process or correlational analyses from quasi-experimental and simple pre-post studies also provide some useful information, though there are more possible threats to the validity of the conclusions. Table 4 provides information on five experimental and quasi-experimental studies providing data on service factors that may lead to positive client outcomes. It is worth noting that across three studies, frequency of contact was associated with better client outcomes, specifically in the areas of housing stability (Barrow et al., 1996), retention in case management and housing (Rife et al., 1991), and positive client satisfaction (Morse et al., 1994). More frequent supportive services and mental health service contacts were associated with both stable housing and also positive client satisfaction (Morse et al.).
Client Characteristics or Moderators. A related question asks: what client characteristics moderate client outcomes? The answers to the question are important in order to identify clients who may be at high risk of poor outcomes and where further service innovations may be necessary to develop more effective approaches. Table 4 also describes six homeless studies that have identified client characteristics associated with outcomes. Four findings have occurred in two or more studies:
Primary Conclusions. The review of the literature leads to several primary conclusions, including:
A central question arises: what should be the criteria for determining exemplary case management practices for homeless people? Clinical wisdom that emerges from the field should play a part in determining exemplary practices. Additionally, however, consideration of empirical research, especially as it relates to effectiveness and cost-effectiveness, should be a second important criterion. This is especially important in the current era of accountability (Freeman & Trabin, 1994) where payers ask for documented, hard outcomes for continued support of services. The recommendations provided below draw upon clinical wisdom within the field, empirical research (when possible), as well as the authors own beliefs. These recommendations are discussed within four categories: critical staff skills and abilities, specific service principles, case management models, and organizational practices.
Agencies need to recruit, select, train, and supervise staff to develop skills and knowledge in the following areas:
It is also likely that agencies can support and foster exemplary case management services by:
Knowledge Dissemination. The federal government should promote exemplary practices through:
Financing. Federal officials should seek to revise policies, regulations, and legislation as necessary to use federal funding to promote exemplary practices. In particular, regulations and policies related to mainstream funding programs (Medicaid, Medicare, Block Grant, PATH grant) should be reviewed and revised to not only allow but to create incentives for the delivery of exemplary services. The growth of managed care within the public sector (especially Medicaid and Medicare) will exert increasing influence on the direction and extent of case management services; the federal government, both within HHS and through consultation to states and local government, should encourage or require the funding of exemplary practices through managed care contracts. HHS should also collaborate with HUD to emphasize the development and funding of exemplary practices through SHP supportive services grants. It addition to encouraging exemplary practices, the federal government should also require monitoring to ensure that delivered services are consistent with exemplary practices (e.g., by requiring treatment specification data, or treatment fidelity assessments). Finally, as noted elsewhere (U.S. DHHS, 1992), the federal government supports case management services through various programs and funding mechanisms, but each funding source usually requires agencies to develop separate financial and service reporting requirements. The more funding sources, the more complex, costly, and inefficient it becomes to comply with and supply requisite information. Greater effort should be made to pursue development of coordinated data and reporting requirements, particularly among the Federal agencies that will increasing support and influence the scope of case management services (pp 8-9).
| Approach/ Model | References | Direct Services | Service Intensity | Staff Client Ratios | Service Locations | Staffing Pattern | Staffing Discipline | Special Emphasis/Descriptive Features | |
| Link/Refer Advocacy | Service Duration | ||||||||
| Target Population: People with Mental Illness | |||||||||
| Intensive Case Management (ICM) | Rog et al., 1987
Wasylenki et al., 1993 |
Some | Extensive | Ongoing | 10:1 or 15:1 to 40:1 | Community | Individual | ICM/Generalist | Emphasis on outreach assisting clients to access needed services and providing advocacy as needed |
| Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) | Dixon et al., 1995 Lehman et al., 1997
Morse et al., 1992 Morse et al., 1997 |
Intensive | Some | Ongoing | 10:1 | Community | Team | Interdisciplinary | Emphasis is on providing intensive treatment and support services in vivo, for an ongoing, open-ended period of time. Staffing is intensive, utilizing an inter-disciplinary team that includes psychiatrist and nurse and a shared caseload. |
| Clinical Case Management | Kline (1993) | Intensive | Some | Ongoing | 10:1 to 20:1 | Community | Individual | CCM/MH Generalist | Emphasis is placed on individual, therapeutic relationship between primary CCM and client, though attention is also given to resource neds and linkages. Services are provided in community and office-based. |
| Social Network Case Management (SNCM) | Kline et al. (1991)
Bebout (1993) |
Some | Some | 10:1 to 20:1 | In community and office | Individual | Emphasis is placedon increasing the capacity of the clients social networks to interact and support each client while also performing ICM functions of outreach, and service linkage. | ||
| Broker Case Management | Morse et al. (1997) | Minimal | Extensive | Moderate to ongoing | 50:1 to 85:1 | Office based | Individual | Generalist | Emphasis is placed on assessing, planning, referring and helping clients to access needed services and resources delivered by other providers elsewhere in the community, and monitoring ongoing needs. Contact tends to be office-based and less intensive. |
| Advocacy | Freddolino & Moxley (1992) | Some | Extensive | Emphasis is upon providing case-specific advocacy to facilitate clients gaining needed resources and services while promoting consumer involvement. Staff are generalist with training in mediation, negotiation, and mental health law. Advocacy services are designed to be ongoing, as needed. | |||||
| Critical Time Intervention (CTI) | Susser et al. (1997) | Some | Extensive | Time limited up to 9 months | In community | Key feature is that services are time-limited to a critical period during and after the transition from shelters to housing (limited to 9 months). Activities are otherwise similar to ICM, but with a special focus on assisting clients to develop stable, ongoing relationships within their natural and service support systems. | |||
| Target Population: Substance Abusers | |||||||||
| Intensive Case Management | Orwin et al. (1994)
Willenbring et al. (1991) |
Some | Moderate to Extensive | 9 months | 30:1 | CMs link clients to service, monitor involvement, and assist (ICM) clients in problem-solving and recovery strategies. | |||
| ICM | Orwin et al. (1994) | Minimal | Moderate to Extensive | Decreasing but open ended | CMs assess client needs, plan, link with services, monitor. | ||||
| ICM | Orwin et al., (Willenbring et al., 1991) | Some | Moderate | 15:1 to 20:1 | In community and office | SA Counselors/ Case Managers | Aggressive outreach, develop trusting relationship, counseling, practical assistance. | ||
| Target Population: Homeless Families | |||||||||
| ICM | Rog et al. | Some | Some | Open-ended | 20:1 | Home and Office | Individual | Varied across CMs, - counselors, SWs, RNs | Intended as ICM, with frequent open-ended service. In practice an average of 15 contacts and 15 hours direct service per first year. |
|
Primary Reference |
Client Group |
Comparison/Design |
n |
Study Period |
Main Findings |
|
Hampton et al. (1992 cited in Mueser et al., 1998 |
Homeless SMI/homeless risk |
ACT vs. standard CM |
165 |
12 mos. |
One ACT site improved stable housing. One ACT (with implementation problems) vs Standard CM non-significant |
|
Herinckx et al. (1997) |
SMI (31% homeless) |
ACT vs. usual care |
174 |
Up to 870 days |
ACT produced greater engagement and better retention into treatment |
|
Hurlburt et al. (1996) |
SMI |
Factorial: Section 8 Subsidy (yes, no) by case management (traditional vs. ICM) |
361 |
24 mos. |
Main effect for Section 8. CM non-significant |
|
Korr & Joseph (1995) |
SMI (State Hospital discharged) |
Assertive CM vs. control |
114 |
6 mos. |
ACM produced better housing status |
|
Lehman et al. (1997) |
SMI |
ACT vs. usual community services |
152 |
12 mos. |
ACT: reduced inpatient and ER use, increased community housing, reduced psych symptoms, (Time effects: family contact, life satisfaction) |
|
Morse et al. (1992) (1993) |
SMI |
ACT vs. CMHC Clinic vs. Drop-in center |
178 |
12 mos. |
ACT produced more client contacts, higher utilization of needed resources, higher client satisfaction, and less homelessness (Time effects included: decreased symptoms; increased income, self-esteem, interpersonal adjustment) |
|
Morse et al. (1997) (1998) |
SMI |
ACT vs. ACT plus Community Workers vs. Broker CM |
165 |
18 mos. |
ACT and ACT/CW: Greater service contacts, higher access and utilization of needed resources, reduced symptoms, higher client satisfaction ACT: more stable housing |
|
Shern et al. (1996) (cited Mueser et al., 1998) |
SMI Homeless |
ICM plus Psychosocial Rehab. vs. Standard CM |
168 |
24 mos. |
ICM/PR produced better housing and symptom outcomes
|
|
Soloman & Draine (1995) |
Homeless, released from jail |
ACT vs. Forensic CM vs. Standard CM |
117 |
1 year No differences |
|
|
Susser et al. (1997) |
SMI Homeless |
Critical Time Intervention (CTI) vs. usual services |
96 |
18 mos. |
CTI reduced homelessness |
|
Primary Reference |
Client Group |
Comparison/Design |
n |
Study Period |
Main Findings |
|
Barrow et al. (1996) |
Homeless women SMI |
Pre-post ICM |
185 |
12 mos. and 24 mos. |
One Year: 51% housed, 42% in shelters Two Year: 61% housed, 39% homeless CM Retention: 16% still active, 30% active until housed, 11% referred elsewhere, 43% Dropped out/inactive MH Treatment Retention. 71% some MH services |
|
Blankertz & Cnaan (1994); |
Homeless dually diagnosed |
Quasi-Experimental: CM/Residential |
176 |
Experimental had lower dropout rate (19% vs. 47%), and, among those who completed 60 days, higher |
|
|
Blankertz & White (1990) |
Program vs. 12-step residential |
Successful discharge discharge rate (29% vs. 8%) |
|||
|
Drake et al. (1997) |
Homeless dually diagnosed |
Quasi-Experimental: ICM (Clinical CM and Social Network CM) vs Standard CM |
217 |
18 mos. |
ICM improved housing stability and marginal improvement of substance abuse
|
|
First et al. (1990) |
SMI: Homeless at risk of homelessness |
Post-only ICM |
88 |
Up to 27 mos. |
63.3% placed in housing
|
|
Meisler et al. (1997) |
Homeless dually diagnosed |
Pre-post (retrospective review) ACT/Integrated Treatment |
114 |
12 to 48 months |
Improvements: treatment retention, housing stability, community tenure. No or minimal effects: Substance abuse |
|
Orwin et al. (1994) a. Boston |
Homeless Substance Abusers (Post detox) |
Quasi-Experimental Intensive Case management vs Customary aftercare |
491 |
? |
CM effective for improving housing permanence and housing independence; Equivocal improvement on abstinence, employment |
|
b. Louisville |
Homeless Substance Abuse (Post detox) |
ICM vs. Standard CM |
179 |
? No reliable effects |
|
|
c. Minneapolis |
Homeless Substance Abusers |
ICM vs. intermediate CM (45:1 ratio) vs. Usual Care |
260 |
? |
Intermediate CM tended to produce more effective substance abuse results and employment, though minimal and equivocal |
|
Rife et al. (1991) |
Homeless |
ICM |
176 |
32 mos. |
56.8% clients placed in housing; 30% remained engaged in ICM and housing 6 months or greater. For those retained in housing and ICM, improvements in some quality of life domains: general well being, living situation, leisure activities, finances, safety, health. |
|
Wasylenki; et al (1993) |
Homeless SMI |
ACT: pre-post |
59 |
9 mos. |
Increased residential stability, social adjustment, and network size, vocational functioning; decreased symptoms. |
|
Study |
Outcome Variable |
Service Factor (Mediator) |
Study Design |
|
Morse et al. (1994) |
Stable housing
Client satisfaction |
Supportive Services Housing Service Contracts Entitlement Service Contracts MH Service contacts Supportive services MH services Overall service contacts |
Experimental/Multivariate Analysis |
|
Dixon et al. (1994) |
Receipt of Section 8 certificate |
Representative Payee services (negative relationship) |
Experimental/Bivariate Categorical |
|
Barrow et al. |
Retention in CM services Stable housing |
Staff client interaction Continuing CM services |
Pre-post/categorical |
|
Herinckx et al. |
Length of retention In treatment |
ACT services |
Experimental/Multivariate |
|
Dixon et al. (1994) |
Receipt of Section 8 certificate |
Schizophrenia (negative relationship) Psychotic symptoms (negative relationship) |
Experimental/Bivariate |
|
Barrow et al. (1996) |
Retention in CM services |
Psychotic symptoms (negative) |
Pre/post categorical |
|
Morse et al. (1994) |
Stable housing |
Women (positive) Caucasian (positive) |
Experimental/Multivariate |
|
Rife et al. |
Retention in CM services |
Frequency of CM contact |
Pre-post/Multivariate |
|
Herinckx (1997) |
Length of retention in treatment |
Number of nights homeless (negative relationship) |
Experimental/multivariate analysis |
|
Hurlburt et al. (1996) |
Housing stability |
Gender (female) Time homeless (negative relationship) Alcohol problems (negative) Drug problems (negative) |
Experimental/multivariate analysis |
|
Rife et al. (1991) |
Retention in CM services and in housing |
Independent living skills Age Substance abuse (negative) Times homeless (negative) Number of hospitalizations (negative) |
Pre-post/Multivariate analysis |
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(1) This report include sites with some randomized, experimental procedures but results are cited here from a multi-site, quasi-experimental analysis
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