Objective: Representative payee programs can improve the community tenure of persons with mental illness by ensuring that their basic needs, such as housing, are met. The authors conducted a survey to assess the extent to which representative payee programs are provided by community mental health centers and the criteria used in enrolling clients in these services.
Methods: Community mental health centers under contract to the Illinois Department of Human Services participated in a census survey. Survey questions concerned provision of representative payee programs, service characteristics, and criteria for enrollment in the programs.
Results: Representative payee programs were directly provided by 59 percent of the 95 community mental health centers in the sample. More than a third of clients who were receiving intensive services had a representative payee. More than three times as many such clients had a representative payee when agencies provided representative payee programs directly rather than through referrals of family members. Frequently cited criteria for enrollment in a representative payee program included a lack of financial skills (89 percent), a lack of rent money (52 percent), substance abuse (50 percent), homelessness (33 percent), and frequent (37 percent) or long-term (30 percent) hospitalization. The majority of the representative payee programs (76 percent) provided this service to clients who received representative payee services under the mandate of the Social Security Administration.
Conclusions: Given the high proportion of clients of agencies that directly provided representative payee services who were assigned to a representative payee, all community mental health centers that provide intensive services should also directly provide representative payee services in order to improve access to representative payee services.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.53.2.190 | DOI Listing |
Community Ment Health J
July 2024
School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA.
This study aimed to examine self-report of financial leverage, conflict, and satisfaction pertaining to representative payeeship for persons with mental illness, which research has not examined in the past decade. Sixty representative payee recipients with mental illness residing across the U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatr Serv
June 2024
National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans, Homeless Programs Office, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Washington, D.C. (Tsai, Kinney, Gluff); School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston (Tsai); National Veterans Financial Resource Center, Rocky Mountain Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center for Suicide Prevention, VA, Denver (Elbogen); Department of Psychiatry, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina (Elbogen).
Objective: The authors reviewed the literature on finance-based interventions used to improve clinical and psychosocial outcomes among adults experiencing mental disorders, substance use disorders, or both.
Methods: A systematic review of the peer-reviewed literature, published from 1900 to 2022, was conducted. Only studies with participants with a mental disorder or a substance use disorder, a structured finance-based intervention or program, a quantitative dependent variable in a behavioral health outcomes domain, and a defined research design were included.
Community Ment Health J
February 2024
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA.
Harm Reduction seeks to mitigate harms associated with health behaviors without the expectation that these behaviors be extinguished completely. Client-Centered Representative Payee (CCRP) is an intervention that modifies the US Social Security Administration's (SSA) Representative Payee policy by incorporating relational harm reduction. We used Human-Centered Design (HCD) methods to elucidate ways that harm reduction principles are present in and integral to CCRP and to create a blueprint for replication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommunity Ment Health J
August 2021
University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, 130 DeSoto Street, 6120 Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA, 15261, USA.
Although nearly 5 million Social Security Income and Social Security Disability Insurance beneficiaries receive entitlements through representative payee programs and approximately 5% of these receive representative payee services from social service agencies, few studies have assessed ways that these services align with their organizations' missions. We conducted nine qualitative interviews with 15 staff members of organizations in Pennsylvania that provide representative payee services in addition to other social or supportive services, with some interviews conducted with multiple representatives within an organization. The purpose of the interviews was to explore the goals of representative payee services for these organizations, whether these providers incorporated representative payee services into their organizational missions, and the extent to which organizations incorporate client-centered approaches in their representative payee services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommunity Ment Health J
August 2021
Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, 130 DeSoto Street, 6120 Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA, 15261, USA.
Nearly 1 million Social Security beneficiaries have representative payees to manage their funds. Although coercion and paternalism are historically associated with payee services, a recent study showed high satisfaction in a payee program incorporating client-centered practices. Separately we reported ways organizations align payee services with their missions to empower clients and improve outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!