Individual Placement and Support


Book Description

This comprehensive monograph synthesizes the research on the Individual Placement and Support model of supported employment for people with severe mental illness. It identifies empirical foundations for core principles of the model and reviews the literature on effectiveness, long-term outcomes, cost-effectiveness, generalizability, implementation, and policy implications.




A Working Life for People with Severe Mental Illness


Book Description

Traditional approaches to vocational rehabilitation, such as skills training classes, job clubs, and sheltered employment, have not been successful in helping people with severe mental illness gain competitive employment. Supported employment, in which clients are placed in jobs and then trained by on-site coaches, is a radically new conceptual approach to vocational rehabilitation designed for people with developmental disabilities. The Individual Placement and Support (IPS) method utilizes the supported employment concept, but modifies it for use with the severely mentally ill. It is the only approach that has a strong empirical research base: rates of competitive employment are 40% or more in IPS programs, compared to 15% in traditional mental health programs. The third volume in the Innovations in Practice and Service Delivery with Vulnerable Populations series, this will be extremely useful to students in psychiatric rehabilitation programs and social work classes dealing with the severely mentally ill, as well as to practitioners in the field.







Community-based Rehabilitation


Book Description

Volume numbers determined from Scope of the guidelines, p. 12-13.




American Rehabilitation


Book Description
















Exemplary Placement Programs


Book Description

Information about successful placement activities for people who are blind or have other severe disabilities of the following nine nonprofit agencies: Goodwill Industries of Atlanta, Inc.; Ed Lindsey Industries for the Blind, Inc.; Development Workshop, Inc.; Sunshine Industries; Lighthouse for the Blind, Ft. Worth, Texas; Goodwill Industries of Orange County; The Chicago Lighthouse for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired; Vocational Guidance Services; and Peckham Vocational Industries.