Center for the Study of Issues in Public Mental Health

Homeless Families in Westchester County, NY
Updated: June, 2002

Principal Investigator: Judith Samuels, Ph.D.; Co-Principal Investigator: Nancy Travers, Deputy Commissioner, Westchester County Dept. of Social Services; Center Investigators: Kim Hopper, Ph.D., Charles Swift, MSW;  Sue Barrow, Ph.D.: Dan Herman, Ph.D.,  Alan Felix, MD (NYS Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University)  

This project challenges the assumption that homeless mothers with children who are beset with mental health or substance abuse problems require the relative confinement and extended stays of congregate shelter living before they can move to manage a household on their own. Their problems in the shelter system will be documented. A critical time intervention case management model, by providing intensive treatment services as they transition into housing, will test the ability of these families to be successfully return to community living. 

PROJECT GOALS

This project is one of 14 nationwide study sites participating in a multi-site study of services for homeless families with mental illness and/or substance abuse disorders.. The project's aim is to increase the knowledge base on successful interventions that work for this population. This Center's study targets single-parent homeless families in the Westchester County shelter system, where the mothers in these family groups have been assessed as having a mental health and/or substance abuse problem.

Phase 1 project goals were to:

In Phase 2 of this study, goals are to: 

The overall aim of this study is to: 

The proposed intervention has three components: availability of conventional or transitional housing; intensive, short-term case management; and the brokering and monitoring of appropriate surrogate support arrangements when the study period ends. Families will be followed over a 15-month period.  The Family CTI is an adaptation of the Critical Time Intervention model that was tested in NYC to prevent recurrent homelessness among single men with mental disorders. 

Funding: This project has been funded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). 

RESEARCH ACTIVITIES AND RESULTS

The Westchester County NY homeless families shelter system assists a constant flow of families, almost all of whom have single female heads of household. Most of these mothers have been assessed as having mental health and/ or substance abuse problems. The shelter system is a "service-intensive shelter program" and all family members receive comprehensive assessments to determine service and treatment needs in health, mental health, substance abuse, education, job training and child-related problems. However, the system has been slow to assist families to move out of shelters and into permanent or transitional housing in the community. 

Methods:

Phase 1 of this project was completed in October 2001. Data was collected by conducting focus groups with residents in the Westchester homeless shelter system and with program/shelter staff. Additional information was collected through a series of interviews with program/shelter management and administrators. Epidemiological data on all homeless families who entered the shelter system between Jan. 1 and June 30, 2000  was extracted from information collected at the family assessment center, the primary entry point into the shelter system.  On- and off-site service providers were also studied including health care providers, mental health and substance abuse services, job training, parenting programs, education, housing programs, and county departments of social services, mental health and health. A systems analysis was conducted on the progression of all families through the shelter and housing system, a database of individual and family characteristics developed, the intervention was adapted to the setting and a fuller understanding of the systems processes in Westchester County was obtained.

In Phase 2 of this study which began in Oct. 2001, 228 families that met eligibility criteria were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: families in the experimental group were placed in transitional, scatter-site apartments and will receive a modified version of CTI, a form of intensive, short-term case management; families in a comparison control group are undergoing usual treatment in the shelter system, attending programs and waiting placement.  Caseworkers in the county's Emergency Housing Apartment Program have been trained in the CTI model adapted to the needs and circumstances of homeless families, and were given reduced size caseloads. 

Findings: 

Data indicate that mothers in this study group tend to be poorly educated, have meager work histories, and face multiple medical, mental health, and substance abuse problems. Their children's lives have lacked stability in terms of housing, education, and periods of separation from their mothers. Racial and ethnic minorities were found to be over-represented among this group, at proportions greater than the national average for homeless populations. 

SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS/ POLICY IMPLICATIONS

The study, by providing intensive case management services and housing,  tests the widely held assumption that homeless mothers with children, especially those beset with multiple problems, require extended stays of congregate shelter living in order to progress to a stage of sufficient housing readiness to manage a household on their own.   


PLANS

The project is ongoing. While the current study concentrates on outcomes for the mothers of these families,  additional funding has been awarded by NIMH for a study of outcomes for the children affected. 

INCLUSION  OF GENDER AND MINORITY SUBJECTS

 Targeted /Planned Enrollment

 

Amer Indian  Alaska

Native

Asian,

Pacific Islander

Black, not Hispanic 

Hispanic

White, not  Hispanic

Unknown

Origin

TOTAL

Mothers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Female

 

 

150

62

88

 

 300

Kids

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Male

 

 

 116

 35

 57

 

 218

Female

 

 

 146

 43

 81

 

 270

Total

 

 

 

 

 

 

 488

 

Entered: July 2000 

Updated: 09/23/2002

 

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