Abstract

BackgroundOffenders with a mental illness are routinely excluded from vocational services due to their mental health. Employment has shown to be very important in improving mental health, reducing recidivism, and connecting people to society. This study examines the effectiveness of an established intervention which is relatively untested in this population, Individual Placement and Support (IPS), to help offenders with mental health problems into competitive employment. The overall research question is whether IPS is effective in gaining and sustaining competitive employment for offenders with a Severe Mental Illness (SMI). The context is an English criminal justice setting across different populations. The study will also measure non-vocational outcomes such as recidivism, mental health and social stability.Methods/DesignA Realistic Evaluation (RE) design will address the questions “What works, for whom, and in what circumstances?” This study includes pre and post comparisons for a cohort of approximately 20 people taking part in IPS, and a similar number of controls, over a one year period. The RE also consists of interviews with practitioners and offenders in order to understand how IPS works and develops within the criminal justice system (CJS). By applying this framework the research can go from discovering whether IPS works, to how and why (or why not) IPS works. This is achieved by examining where the intervention is occurring (Context (C)), the mechanisms (M) that create particular behaviours, and how the outcomes (O) from the intervention all come together (CMOs). Employment outcomes will also be examined for all participants.DiscussionBy applying RE the research will permit inferences to be drawn about how and why (or why not) IPS works, by examining context, mechanisms and outcomes. IPS has never been implemented within the CJS in the United Kingdom. As a result, this evaluative research will not only provide a novel insight into the core research areas, but also how the intervention can be improved for others in the future.

Highlights

  • Offenders with a mental illness are routinely excluded from vocational services due to their mental health

  • Individual Placement and Support (IPS) has never been implemented within the Criminal Justice System (CJS) in the United Kingdom

  • This evaluative research will provide a novel insight into the core research areas, and how the intervention can be improved for others in the future

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Summary

Discussion

The study will be carried out across a wide geographical area. A total of eight sites, seven prisons and one probation area are eligible to provide referrals to the study, including both people who do and do not want help to find competitive employment via the IPS service. Computer; TAG: Threshold Assessment Grid; GHQ: General Health Questionnaire; BSI: Brief Symptom Inventory; MANSA: Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life; MTW: Motivation and Readiness to Work; SNA: Social Network Analysis; RE: Realistic Evaluation; CMOs: Contexts, Mechanisms and Outcomes; NHS: National Health Service; IPS-25: IPS Fidelity Scale; PSM: Propensity Scored Matching; UoN: University of Nottingham; US: United States; UK: United Kingdom; SPSS: Statistical Package for the Social Science Competing interests This project is in partnership with Her Majesty’s Prison Service; the Centre for Mental Health, London; South Staffordshire and Shropshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust; Shropshire Council; and SOVA (a charity that works in the heart of communities in England and Wales to help facilitate desistance). All authors have commented on more than one draft of this paper and have read and approved the final version

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