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Original Articles

Barriers to employment for people with severe mental illness and criminal justice involvement

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Pages 692-700 | Received 19 Sep 2016, Accepted 03 Oct 2017, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Background: People with severe mental illness (SMI) and criminal justice involvement (CJI) are able to achieve competitive employment when provided with evidence-based services, but outcomes are modest compared to studies of SMI in general.

Aims: To investigate barriers to employment facing people with SMI and CJI receiving employment services.

Method: Employment service providers assessed top three barriers to employment for 87 people with SMI and CJI enrolled in a randomized controlled trial comparing a job club program to supported employment. Main barriers were identified and differences between programs were analyzed. Associations between barriers and client background characteristics were investigated.

Results: The most common barriers were failure to engage and disengagement from services, followed by substance abuse. Staff from the two employment programs reported similar barriers.

Conclusions: Engagement problems were the single most important barrier to employment across programs. Surprisingly, criminal history was rarely mentioned. This may be explained by barriers arising earlier in the process, before achieving employer contact. The results call for recognition and awareness of the importance of motivational issues as well as factors that may inhibit engagement in services, highlighting possible augmentations to evidence-based employment services that may be necessary in the rehabilitation of this patient group.

Acknowledgements

We thank Izabela M. Krzos, Carla M. Elliott, Sheila O’Neill and Ginnie Fraser at Thresholds, for their assistance in data collection and handling. We would also like to thank all the individual service providers who reviewed the rosters and registered barriers for all their clients enrolled in the study.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest.

Additional information

Funding

The data used in this study was collected in research supported by grant H133G100110 from the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research 10.13039/100006663.

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