A Systematic Review of Health Outcomes Associated With Provision of Representative Payee Services.

Psychiatr Serv

UPMC Center for High-Value Health Care, Pittsburgh (Kinsky); Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh (Creasy, Hawk).

Published: August 2019

Objective: The Social Security Administration's Representative Payment Program appoints payees as financial managers for individuals determined incapable of managing their funds. The aim is to afford stability and increase clients' ability to meet health and behavioral priorities. This systematic review examined literature on the effect of representative payee services on identified outcomes.

Methods: A search of academic databases and gray literature was conducted in November 2015 and repeated in December 2017. Included studies had a comparison group; excluded studies examined services other than representative payee. Primary outcomes included substance use, symptoms of mental illness, housing stability, quality of life, and other health-specific outcomes. Secondary outcomes included the client-payee relationship and client satisfaction with services.

Results: Eighteen articles met inclusion criteria. Studies assessing primary outcomes found several positive and few negative effects of representative payee services. Studies examining secondary outcomes indicated that receipt of such services may affect the client-provider relationship, increase conflict and violence, and increase clients' perceptions of financial leverage (i.e., a payee's use of control over funds to encourage, incentivize, or otherwise coerce certain behaviors). Most studies were of poor or moderate quality. Studies spanned nearly two decades, and results may have been confounded by the evolution of service delivery modalities.

Conclusions: Representative payee services are largely beneficial or neutral in terms of health and behavior outcomes. Negative findings mainly involved the client-payee relationship. Given that more than five million individuals have a representative payee, assessing the impact of these services with more rigorous research designs is worthwhile.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6675662PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.201800320DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

representative payee
24
payee services
16
systematic review
8
increase clients'
8
primary outcomes
8
outcomes included
8
secondary outcomes
8
client-payee relationship
8
outcomes
7
representative
7

Similar Publications

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 PDF

Systematic Review of Financial Interventions for Adults Experiencing Behavioral Health Conditions.

Psychiatr 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.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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 PDF

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 PDF

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 PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!