Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation (Jul 2024)
The Road to Reintegration: Evaluating the Effectiveness of VA Healthcare in Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Retention for Veterans with Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders
Abstract
Matthew E Sprong,1,2 Heaven Hollender,3 Bob Blankenberger,2 Stuart Rumrill,4 Yu-Sheng Lee,5 Travis Bland,2 Jeremiah Bailey,6 Kenneth Weber,1 James Gilbert,1 Ken Kriz,2 Frank D Buono7 1Edward Hines Jr. VA Medical Center, Hines, IL, USA; 2University of Illinois Springfield, School of Public Management and Policy, Springfield, IL, USA; 3Indiana University - Indianapolis, School of Health & Human Services, Indianapolis, IN, USA; 4Univerity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Department of Kinesiology and Community Health, Champaign, IL, USA; 5University of Illinois Springfield, School of Integrated Sciences, Sustainability, and Public Health, Springfield, IL, USA; 6Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Tallahassee, FL, USA; 7Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USACorrespondence: Matthew E Sprong, Email [email protected]: Veterans diagnosed with mental health and/or substance use disorders (SUD) often face significant barriers to employment and reintegration into civilian society. In the current study, we investigated whether how the VA healthcare system for mental health and/or SUD treatment predicted program enrollment into vocational rehabilitation, simultaneous mental health and/or SUD treatment while enrolled in vocational rehabilitation predicted employment at discharge, and mental health and/or SUD treatment continues and employment remain 60-days-post-vocational-rehabilitation discharge.Methods: An outcome-based, summative program evaluation design to measure quality assurance of vocational rehabilitation services provided to 402 veteran patients enrolled in a VA healthcare located within the Great Lakes Health Care System – Veterans Integrated Services Network.Results: Multivariable logistic regression analyses showed psychological empowerment (confidence in one’s ability to work or find work) is a significant factor determining whether a veteran is enrolled in the vocational rehabilitation program, prior mental health treatment (yes/no) and frequency of mental health treatment did not predict program enrollment, and frequency of SUD VA system treatment 60 days prior did not predict program enrollment. Other findings showed that simultaneous mental health and/or SUD treatment while enrolled in vocational rehabilitation did not predict employment at discharge, and employment at discharge did not predict continued mental health and/or SUD treatment post-discharge from vocational rehabilitation. However, veterans with both SUD and mental health and continued mental health treatment were less likely to be employed.Conclusion: Utilization of real-world program evaluation data from an actual VHA vocational rehabilitation program enhances the study’s ecological validity, offering practical implications for policymakers and practitioners in the field. The findings support the importance of veterans enrolling in mental health and/or SUD treatment simultaneously while enrolled in vocational rehabilitation services, as integrating vocational rehabilitation with mental health and SUD treatment services can lead to improved vocational and health outcomes for veterans (eg, development of targeted interventions to support veterans’ successful reintegration into the workforce and society).Keywords: substance use disorders, mental health, veterans affairs, health administration, veterans, vocational rehabilitation, treatment access