Jeffrey L. Quarles’s research while affiliated with United States Department of Veterans Affairs and other places

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Publications (1)


A 20-Site Comparison of Transition-in-Place Versus Traditional Transitional Housing Programs
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

September 2017

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63 Reads

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4 Citations

Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research

Jack Tsai

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Jeffrey L. Quarles

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Transition-in-Place (TIP) is a housing model being piloted in the veterans affairs transitional housing program, Grant & Per Diem (GPD). This observational 20-site study compares characteristics and outcomes of 488 clients in TIP and 10,388 clients in traditional GPD programs. TIP participants were younger, better educated, healthier, and reported higher employment income than traditional GPD participants. Adjusting for these differences, TIP participants were more likely to have their own housing and reported higher employment and public support income at program exit, although the differences were small. These results inform use of the TIP model as a public health intervention.

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Citations (1)


... Homeless-experienced populations have a range of characteristics, including varying degrees of homeless chronicity, mental health symptom burden, and functional impairments. It is generally understood that a variety of services are needed to meet the complex housing, health, and social needs of homeless-experienced individuals [13,14]. The homeless services system provides a continuum of housing models paired with a range of service types, including transitional housing in congregate and non-congregate settings, and permanent supportive housing (PSH), i.e., subsidized housing with supportive services [15]. ...

Reference:

Pathways to social integration among homeless-experienced adults with serious mental illness: a qualitative perspective
A 20-Site Comparison of Transition-in-Place Versus Traditional Transitional Housing Programs

Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research