
Occupational Therapy Publications
Document Type
Report
Publication Date
Spring 2024
URL with Digital Object Identifier
housing. We conducted: 1) mixed interviews (qualitative and qualitative) with 85 tenants; 2) qualitative interviews with 10 KFHC staff and leaders; and 3) qualitative interviews with 13 community service providers in the Kingston, Ontario community. Our report begins with a rationale for this project, followed by a summary of the stakeholder consultation methods used. This is followed by a detailed summary of our consultation findings with all three stakeholder groups. We end our report by making several recommendations for future research, policy and practice aimed at more effectively addressing the psychosocial needs of tenants living with mental illness in social housing in the Kingston community. Our recommendations, while based on interviews conducted in the Kingston, Ontario community, may be relevant to researchers, policymakers, and practitioners in a range of communities. The findings of our consultation will be used as a foundation for co-designing strategies in collaboration with tenants, social housing staff and leaders and community service providers aimed at improving the psychosocial well-being of social housing tenants.
Abstract
Social housing is housing that is owned and/ or operated by governments or non-profit groups for the purpose of providing deeply affordable housing for individuals living in low income. It is an essential social service, and one that is needed more than ever before in the context of a growing housing affordability and homelessness crisis that continues to persist across Canada and beyond [1]. In recent decades, approaches to supporting individuals living with mental illness have shifted from institutional approaches to community-care models where individuals live in and receive services in their homes and the community. These shifts, which have been important for promoting the recovery of Canadians living with mental illness, have changed the landscape of social housing. Because individuals living with mental illness experience poverty at a disproportionate rate, access to social housing is essential for meeting their housing needs. Social housing providers have noticed these changes, and report that they are supporting a tenant group that has become increasingly complex over time [2]. Social housing providers are considered landlords, however, and as such, are allotted little to no funding to provide services to tenants. Instead, they are intended to rely on community services to meet the needs of their tenants in the community. In recent years, however, social housing providers have reported that community services are not meeting their tenants’ needs, and consistent with these reports, tenants living with mental illness report a range of unmet needs [2, 3]. This has likely worsened since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has exposed serious health inequities among individuals living in poverty [4, 5]. This report represents the findings of a stakeholder consultation with tenants living with mental illness in social housing, social housing staff and leaders, and community service providers in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. In this consultation, we focused on identifying the strengths and unmet psychosocial needs of single adult tenants living with mental illness in social housing. We collaborated with one social housing provider, Kingston-Frontenac Housing Corporation (KFHC), located in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. In conducting this consultation, we have interviewed tenants, KFHC staff and leadership, and community service providers who support tenants in social housing. We conducted: 1) mixed interviews (qualitative and qualitative) with 85 tenants; 2) qualitative interviews with 10 KFHC staff and leaders; and 3) qualitative interviews with 13 community service providers in the Kingston, Ontario community. Our report begins with a rationale for this project, followed by a summary of the stakeholder consultation methods used. This is followed by a detailed summary of our consultation findings with all three stakeholder groups. We end our report by making several recommendations for future research, policy and practice aimed at more effectively addressing the psychosocial needs of tenants living with mental illness in social housing in the Kingston community. Our recommendations, while based on interviews conducted in the Kingston, Ontario community, may be relevant to researchers, policymakers, and practitioners in a range of communities. The findings of our consultation will be used as a foundation for co-designing strategies in collaboration with tenants, social housing staff and leaders and community service providers aimed at improving the psychosocial well-being of social housing tenants.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Citation of this paper:
Marshall, C., Drake, F., Reynolds, S., Oudshoorn, A., Gewurtz, R., Erickson, E., Phillips, B., Holmes, J., Easton, C., Perez, S., Landry, T., Lambert, E., Stacey, C. & Metcalfe, T. (2024). Mobilizing Community Assets to Support Single Adults Living with Mental Illness and Substance Use Disorders in Social Housing: Identifying Needs to Inform the Path Forward. Accessed at: https://www.sjmhlab.com/_files/ugd/ fbaf23_50f55e5814a74b2293ec4164b8876125.pdf?index=true
Notes
https://www.sjmhlab.com/_files/ugd/fbaf23_50f55e5814a74b2293ec4164b8876125.pdf?index=true