State Unemployment Rates and Vocational Rehabilitation Outcomes

Author:

Chan Jacob Yuichung1,Wang Chia-Chiang2,Ditchman Nicole3,Kim Jeong Han4,Pete Joseph5,Chan Fong6,Dries Bradley7

Affiliation:

1. Ball State University, Muncie, IN, USA

2. University at Buffalo, the State University of New York, USA

3. Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, USA

4. Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, USA

5. Alabama State University, Montgomery, USA

6. University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA

7. Goodwill-Easter Seals of Minnesota, St. Paul, USA

Abstract

General labor market condition is an important contextual factor influencing employment opportunities and outcomes for people with disabilities and is particularly significant given the recent economic recession. Yet, longstanding data analytic strategies have focused only on individual predictors rather than the dynamic interaction among individual level and organizational/environmental level variables, such as considering the role of labor market conditions. This study used the Rehabilitation Services Administration Case Service Report (RSA-911) data for fiscal years 2005 and 2009 to represent two distinct time periods, one before and one during the U.S. economic recession, respectively. Hierarchical linear modeling was used to examine the relationship between state unemployment rate and its interaction with personal factors influencing the employment outcomes of people with disabilities receiving state vocational rehabilitation services. Results found negligible between-state differences, but state unemployment rates were found to moderate the relationships between some demographic variables and successful competitive employment vocational rehabilitation (VR) case closure. Specifically, the significance and magnitude of those effect sizes varied by general economic context. These findings call attention for the need to consider the role of contextual variables, such as state unemployment rates, and their impact on the predictive strength of specific demographic and disability variables on employment outcomes for people with disabilities.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Applied Psychology,Rehabilitation

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