Patterns in Referral and Admission to Vocational Rehabilitation Associated with Coexisting Psychiatric and Substance-Use Disorders

Author:

Drebing Charles E.1,Rosenheck Robert2,Schutt Russell3,Kasprow Wesley J.2,Penk Walter4

Affiliation:

1. Boston University School of Medicine

2. Yale School of Medicine

3. University of Massachusetts, Boston

4. Harvard Medical School, Cambridge Hospital

Abstract

Archival data from 17,929 homeless adults entering the Veterans Health Administration's Healthcare for Homeless Veterans program were analyzed to identify whether the rate of referral and admission to vocational rehabilitation differed between adults with psychiatric disorders alone and those with psychiatric disorders with a coexisting substance-use disorder (SUD). Participants with an SUD had an 11% greater chance of being referred to vocational rehabilitation than did those with a psychiatric disorder alone. Of the participants referred to vocational rehabilitation, those with an SUD were almost twice as likely to participate. Those with an SUD also had a higher rate of employment prior to evaluation than did those with a psychiatric disorder alone. These advantages were significant after covarying for demographic variables, specific psychiatric diagnosis, and Addiction Severity Index (McLellan, Luborsky, & Woody, 1980) psychiatric composite score. These findings fail to support the hypothesis that there is a bias in the process of referral or admission into vocational rehabilitation and suggest that work and participation in work rehabilitation are not negatively affected by a coexisting SUD.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

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

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3. Drake, R.E., Brunett, M.F. & Mueser, K.T. (1998). Substance use disorder and social functioning in schizophrenia. In K. T. Mueser & N. Tarrier (Eds.), Handbook of social functioning in schizophrenia (pp. 280—288). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.

4. The New Hampshire study of supported employment for people with severe mental illness.

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