ARTICLE - CANDIDATE TRANSITION VARIABLES

Display candidate transaction variables for article


Id 539
Author Friesinger J.G., Topor A., Bøe T.D., Larsen I.B.
Title Studies regarding supported housing and the built environment for people with mental health problems: A mixed-methods literature review
Reference
Friesinger J.G., Topor A., Bøe T.D., Larsen I.B.; Studies regarding supported housing and the built environment for people with mental health problems: A mixed-methods literature review ;Health and Place vol:57.0 issue: page:44.0

Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85063761977&doi=10.1016%2fj.healthplace.2019.03.006&partnerID=40&md5=b27caa08cd2804f1ceab0340b7a38d66
Abstract Places where people live are important for their personal and social lives. This is also the case for people with mental health problems living in supported housing. To summarise the existing knowledge, we conducted a systematic review of 13 studies with different methodologies regarding the built environment in supported housing and examined their findings in a thematic analysis. The built environment of supported housing involves three important and interrelated themes: well-being, social identity and privacy. If overregulated by professionals or located in problematic neighbourhoods or buildings, the settings could be an obstacle to recovery. If understood as meaningful places with scope for control by the tenants or with amenities nearby, the settings could aid recovery. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd


Results:

Candidate transition variables
The way the built environment is constructed matters. .
People with mental health problems need meaningful places in which to dwell that offer both protection and opportunities to grow..