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https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v9i3.4314

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"It’s about Living Like Everyone Else": Dichotomies of Housing Support in Swedish Mental Health Care

[journal article]

Börjesson, Ulrika
Skillmark, Mikael
Bülow, Pia H.
Bülow, Per
Vejklint, Mattias
Wilińska, Monika

Abstract

The deinstitutionalization of psychiatric care has not only altered the living conditions for people with severe mental illness but has also greatly affected social services staff. In the Mental Health Act launched by the Swedish government in 1995, a new kind of service called ‘housing support’ and... view more

The deinstitutionalization of psychiatric care has not only altered the living conditions for people with severe mental illness but has also greatly affected social services staff. In the Mental Health Act launched by the Swedish government in 1995, a new kind of service called ‘housing support’ and a new occupational group, 'housing support workers', was introduced. However, housing support does not currently operate under any specific guidelines regarding the content of the service. This study explores housing support at local level in various municipalities of one Swedish county. The data is based on discussion with three focus groups: care managers, managers for home and community‐based support, and housing supporter workers. The perspective of institutional logics as a specific set of frames that creates a standard for what should or could be done, or alternately what cannot be questioned, is applied to analyze the constructed meaning of housing support. The meaning of housing support is constructed through three dichotomies: process and product, independence and dependence, and flexibility and structure. These dichotomies can be understood as dilemmas inherent in the work and organizing of housing support. With no clear guidelines, the levels of organizational and professional discretion create a space for local flexibility but may also contribute to tremendous differences in defining and implementing housing support. We discuss the potential consequences for housing support users implied by the identified discrepancies.... view less

Keywords
Sweden; social work; residential behavior; housing conditions; mental illness; health policy

Classification
Social Work, Social Pedagogics, Social Planning

Free Keywords
focus groups; housing support; institutional logics; welfare work

Document language
English

Publication Year
2021

Page/Pages
p. 276-285

Journal
Social Inclusion, 9 (2021) 3

Issue topic
Home- and Community-Based Work at the Margins of Welfare: Balancing between Disciplinary, Participatory and Caring Approaches

ISSN
2183-2803

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.