x - Kentucky IPS Supported Employment
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Transcript x - Kentucky IPS Supported Employment
Evidence for the
Effectiveness of
Individual Placement and
Support Model of
Supported Employment
Updated 8/13/14 by Gary Bond
Expressed Interest in Employment
Reported in 8 Surveys
Need
2/3 clients with severe mental
illness want to work, but only
~10% employed.
Until the 1990s, no effective
models for helping clients
achieve stable competitive
employment.
Day Treatment Conversions to
IPS: Common Study Design
Discontinued day treatment
Reassigned day treatment staff to
new positions
Implemented new IPS program
Compared to 3 sites not converting
Sources: Drake and Becker
Day Treatment Conversion Studies:
6 Sites Converting to IPS
vs. 4 Control Sites (Not Converting)
40%
35%
30%
Percentage 25%
Competitively20%
Employed
15%
10%
5%
0%
37.5%
13.4%
Sites Converting to
IPS (n = 317)
15.2%
12.4%
Control Sites
(n = 184)
Before
After
Similar Results in All
Day Treatment Conversions
Large increase in employment rates
No negative outcomes (e.g., relapses)
Clients, families, staff liked change
Most former day treatment clients
spent more time in community, even
those not working
Resulted in cost savings
22 Randomized Controlled
Trials of Individual
Placement and Support (IPS)
Best evidence available on
effectiveness
RCTs are gold standard in medical
research
Competitive Employment Rates in 22
Randomized Controlled Trials of IPS
Overall Findings for 22 RCTs
All 22 studies showed a significant
advantage for IPS
Mean competitive employment rates
for the 22 studies:
56% for IPS
23% for controls
(Each study weighted equally in
calculating mean rates)
Four Measurement Domains
of Employment Outcomes
Job acquisition (% employed)
Hours worked per week
Total hours worked/earnings
Job duration (months worked)
(Bond, Campbell, & Drake, 2012)
18-Month Competitive Employment
Outcomes in 4 Controlled Trials of IPS
(Bond, Drake & Campbell, 2012)
Mean Tenure of Longest-Held Job
in Two IPS Studies
Job tenure for IPS was triple that for usual
services in Hoffman study.
Steady Worker Rate in Three LongTerm Follow-up Studies
IPS Is Effective in a Wide
Variety of Target Populations
Homeless
PTSD
Criminal justice
diagnosis
history
Frequently
On disability
hospitalized
benefits
Mental illness +
African American
substance use
Hispanic
Older adults
Johnson & Johnson-Dartmouth
IPS Learning Collaborative
16 states/regions in US
(over 150 sites)
3 European countries
(as of August 2014)
IPS Fidelity and Outcomes
in 88 Sites in Learning Collaborative
(Bond et al., 2012)