Author:
Modini Matthew,Tan Leona,Brinchmann Beate,Wang Min-Jung,Killackey Eoin,Glozier Nicholas,Mykletun Arnstein,Harvey Samuel B.
Abstract
BackgroundIndividual placement and support (IPS) is a vocational rehabilitation
programme that was developed in the USA to improve employment outcomes
for people with severe mental illness. Its ability to be generalised to
other countries and its effectiveness in varying economic conditions
remains to be ascertained.AimsTo investigate whether IPS is effective across international settings and
in different economic conditions.MethodA systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
comparing IPS with traditional vocational services was undertaken; 17
studies, as well as 2 follow-up studies, were included. Meta-regressions
were carried out to examine whether IPS effectiveness varied according to
geographic location, unemployment rates or gross domestic product (GDP)
growth.ResultsThe overall pooled risk ratio for competitive employment using IPS
compared with traditional vocational rehabilitation was 2.40 (95% CI
1.99–2.90). Meta-regressions indicated that neither geographic area nor
unemployment rates affected the overall effectiveness of IPS. Even when a
country's GDP growth was less than 2% IPS was significantly more
effective than traditional vocational training, and its benefits remained
evident over 2 years.ConclusionsIndividual placement and support is an effective intervention across a
variety of settings and economic conditions and is more than twice as
likely to lead to competitive employment when compared with traditional
vocational rehabilitation.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
308 articles.
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