Introduction
Young adults experiencing early psychosis want to work (Iyer et al. Reference Iyer, Mangala, Anitha, Thara and Malla2011; Ramsay et al. Reference Ramsay, Broussard, Goulding, Cristofaro, Hall, Kaslow, Killackey, Penn and Compton2011). Many also want to pursue education, either in conjunction with employment or as preparation for employment (Nuechterlein et al. Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Turner, Ventura, Becker and Drake2008). Vocational and educational issues are common reasons clinicians refer patients to early intervention programmes (Cotton et al. Reference Cotton, Luxmoore, Woodhead, Albiston, Gleeson and McGorry2011).
Early intervention programmes were pioneered in Australia (McGorry et al. Reference McGorry, Edwards, Mihalopoulos, Harrigan and Jackson1996, Reference McGorry, Killackey and Yung2008) and subsequently spread across wealthy countries. These programmes have varied in their specific offerings, but most seek to identify people early in the course of psychotic illness and help them to achieve rapid remissions, prevent relapses and maintain functioning. No standard model of early intervention has yet emerged, although most experts endorse several core principles, such as early detection, family psychoeducation and assertive outreach (Addington et al. Reference Addington, McKenzie, Norman, Wang and Bond2013; Hughes et al. Reference Hughes, Stavely, Simpson, Goldstone, Pennell and McGorry2014). Early formulations of the early intervention models recognised the importance of role functioning, but mainly restricted interventions in this area to social skills training. The short-term clinical effectiveness of the early intervention programmes is promising (Malla et al. Reference Malla, Norman and Joober2005), but their long-term effectiveness remains uncertain (Yung, Reference Yung2012). Although two narrative reviews have examined supported employment for patients with early psychosis (Killackey et al. Reference Killackey, Jackson, Gleeson, Hickie and McGorry2006; Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, Killackey, Smith, Shepherd, Singh and Craig2010a ), no review has comprehensively examined employment and education outcomes in early intervention programmes.
Three recent developments suggest that employment services may play a crucial role in early intervention programmes. First, the early intervention has renewed hope for altering the course of psychotic illnesses, in part because these young people are highly motivated to pursue functional outcomes. People with early psychosis want help finding employment: thus employment services serve as an engagement strategy for enhancing participation in treatment. Second, following the success of supported employment in helping people with long-term serious mental illness to achieve competitive employment (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Goldberg, Braude, Dougherty, Daniels, Ghose, George and Delphin-Rittmon2014), clinicians and researchers are adopting supported employment in early intervention programmes (Killackey et al. Reference Killackey, Jackson, Gleeson, Hickie and McGorry2006). Young adults with mental illness appear to benefit as much, if not more, from supported employment than do their older counterparts (Browne & Waghorn, Reference Browne and Waghorn2010; Burke-Miller et al. Reference Burke-Miller, Razzano, Grey, Blyler and Cook2012; Ferguson et al. Reference Ferguson, Xie and Glynn2012; Bond et al. in press). Third, helping young adults experiencing early psychosis to gain employment may prevent disability. People develop schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses early in life, typically between the ages of 16 and 26. During this developmental period, most people are making important transitions to adulthood, including finishing their educations and establishing their identities as workers. The onset of psychosis often interrupts this life trajectory (Yung, Reference Yung2012), in part due to professional advice to accept long periods of treatment and functional inactivity in order to achieve stability and prevent relapses (Bassett & Lloyd, Reference Bassett and Lloyd2001).
This paper provides a systematic review of the literature on the impact of early intervention services on employment and education outcomes for people experiencing early psychosis, defined as the first 6 months of experiencing psychotic symptoms (Caton et al. Reference Caton, Drake, Hasin, Dominguez, Shrout, Samet and Schanzer2005). We hypothesised that the patients receiving supported employment based on evidence-based principles would achieve improved employment outcomes compared with baseline levels and to patients receiving services as usual. Secondarily, we hypothesised that participation in supported employment would increase enrolment rates in mainstream educational programmes.
Methods
Overview
We conducted a systematic review of employment and education outcomes for early intervention programmes, summarising outcomes for all studies reporting relevant longitudinal outcomes. As supported employment was the most frequently studied employment model, we examined it separately and in more detail.
Study inclusion criteria
We included longitudinal studies of early intervention programmes with at least ten participants reporting vocational/educational outcomes (defined broadly to include a range of indicators and scales). We included studies with uncontrolled, quasi-experimental and experimental designs.
Literature search procedures
Our literature search strategies included electronic searches of MEDLINE and of publications within the journal, Early Intervention in Psychiatry; a manual search of conference proceedings from three recent meetings of the International Early Psychosis Association; two published reviews (Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, Killackey, Smith, Shepherd, Singh and Craig2010a ; Skalli & Nicole, Reference Skalli and Nicole2011); and manual screening of reference lists of all included studies.
We identified articles from the international literature on employment interventions among young adults with serious mental illness by searching PubMed/MEDLINE from inception to April, 2013, using key words to generate sets of records, combined by the Boolean term ‘OR,’ for the following themes: severe mental illness (‘psychosis,’ ‘schizophrenia,’ ‘bipolar disorder,’ and ‘disorders with psychotic features’), employment (‘job placement,’ ‘employment,’ ‘vocational rehabilitation,’ ‘supported employment,’ ‘individual placement and support’ and ‘occupation’) and young adulthood (‘young adult,’ ‘first episode,’ ‘first-episode’ and ‘early intervention’), restricted to English-language publications. We combined themes using the Boolean term ‘AND’ to find their intersections. Using similar search terms, we also performed an electronic search of Early Intervention in Psychiatry. Based on the abstracts from these two searches, the first author identified references for full-text review, which the first and third authors then independently assessed to determine appropriateness for inclusion. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus.
Classification of treatments and studies
We distinguished three types of early intervention programmes: (1) those providing supported employment services, (2) those with an unspecified vocational component and (3) those without an identified vocational component.
The most widely accepted model of supported employment for adults with severe mental illness is Individual Placement and Support (IPS). It is an evidence-based model of supported employment (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Goldberg, Braude, Dougherty, Daniels, Ghose, George and Delphin-Rittmon2014), guided by eight principles: eligibility based on consumer choice, focus on competitive employment, integration of mental health and employment services, attention to patient preferences, work incentives planning, rapid job search, systematic job development and individualised job supports (Drake et al. Reference Drake, Bond and Becker2012). Programmes adhering to these principles, as measured by an IPS fidelity scale, generally have better competitive employment outcomes (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Becker and Drake2011). For young adults with early psychosis, IPS has been expanded to include supported education as well as supported employment (Nuechterlein et al. Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Turner, Ventura, Becker and Drake2008). In this report, we use the term ‘supported employment’ to include both programmes closely following the IPS model as well as those not explicitly adhering to IPS fidelity standards.
Outcome measures
Although our intent was to focus on studies reporting competitive employment at baseline and follow-up, we broadened the inclusion criteria to include studies reporting any vocational outcomes, including studies reporting findings for occupational functioning scales. In addition, some studies combined employment and education outcome into a single measure. When available, we also recorded rates of enrolment in education.
Review methods and data analysis
We summarised study characteristics and main findings for all studies meeting inclusion criteria. Heterogeneity of outcome measures precluded aggregating results for early intervention without an identified vocational component or an unspecified vocational component. As it was possible, we examined the supported employment studies in greater detail, using tabular reporting to facilitate study comparisons and aggregating follow-up employment and education rates. We tested the significance of differences in rates at follow-up using chi squares (χ 2) and calculated the effect size (ES) for the rate differences between supported employment and controls using the arc sine approximation (Lipsey, Reference Lipsey1990). Using RevMan (2012), a computer software program used in Cochrane meta-analytic reviews, we evaluated aggregate employment and education for supported employment studies with comparison groups. This computer software generates forest plots displaying effect sizes weighted by sample sizes.
Results
Search results
As outlined in Fig. 1, the electronic searches yielded 237 and 252 references, respectively, from PubMed/MEDLINE and Early Intervention in Psychiatry, resulting in 34 publications for full-text review (26 and 13, respectively, with five duplicates). We identified 13 additional studies from other sources and conducted full-text reviews on unduplicated studies. Finally, we identified 28 studies meeting inclusion criteria.
Early intervention programmes offering supported employment
We identified 11 studies of early intervention programmes offering supported employment, as shown in Table 1. These included four uncontrolled evaluations (Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, McNeil, Firn, Koletsi, Perkins and Singh2004, Reference Rinaldi, Perkins, McNeil, Hickman and Singh2010b ; Porteous & Waghorn, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2007, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2009), four controlled and quasi-controlled trials reporting employment and education rates at baseline and follow-up (Killackey et al. Reference Killackey, Jackson and McGorry2008, Reference Killackey, Allott, Cotton, Chinnery, Sun, Collins, Massey, Baksheev and Jackson2012; Major et al. Reference Major, Hinton, Flint, Chalmers-Brown, McLoughlin and Johnson2010; Nuechterlein et al. Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Ventura, Turner, Gitlin, Gretchen-Doorly, Becker, Drake, Wallace and Libermansubmitted for publication), all of which reported separate statistics for employment and education, and three studies of early intervention programmes providing supported employment outcomes for a combined measure of employment and education, preventing their inclusion in our tabled results (Singh et al. Reference Singh, Grange, Vijaykrishnan, Francis, White, Fisher, Chisholm and Firn2007; Fowler et al. Reference Fowler, Hodgekins, Howells, Millward, Ivins, Taylor, Hackmann, Hill, Bishop and MacMillan2009a ; Dudley et al. Reference Dudley, Nicholson, Stott and Spoors2014).
*EI significantly higher than C.
EI, early intervention programme; SE, supported employment; nat, national; Mn, mean; C, control; emp, employment; PT, part time; FT, full time; SOFAS, Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale; SAS II, Social Adjustment Scale II; RFS, Role Functioning Scale.
The uncontrolled studies of early intervention programmes offering supported employment were naturalistic programme evaluations of ongoing service provision with a rolling enrolment and a shrinking sample over time. For two studies (Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, McNeil, Firn, Koletsi, Perkins and Singh2004, Reference Rinaldi, Perkins, McNeil, Hickman and Singh2010b ), we inspected sample sizes for different follow-up periods and chose the time frame that fairly reflected the outcomes while maintaining a reasonably large sample size. In two other studies (Porteous & Waghorn, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2007, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2009), the authors did not have a fixed follow-up period (Geoff Waghorn, personal communication, 2013). We reported their follow-up as ‘up to 24 months.’
Employment and education outcomes
In Table 2 we report employment and education rates at baseline and during follow-up for eight studies of early intervention programmes providing supported employment. Overall, 709 patients received supported employment and 165 patients received early intervention services excluding supported employment. The employment rate during follow-up for the supported employment patients was 49%, compared with 29% for the control patients, χ 2 (1) = 21.6, p < 0.0001, ES = 0.41. Adjusting for the rate of employment among patients at programme admission, the increased employment rate from baseline to follow-up was 41% for supported employment and 17% for controls, ES = 0.54.
SE, supported employment; Ctl, control group.
The enrolment rate in education during follow-up was 27% for supported employment participants compared with 33% of patients receiving usual services, χ 2 (1) = 2.3, n.s., ES = −0.13. The increase in education enrolment rate over baseline for supported employment participants was 11% compared with 15% for patients receiving usual services, ES = −0.12.
A meta-analysis on follow-up employment rates for four studies included 167 patients receiving supported employment and 165 patients receiving usual services (early intervention clinical services without supported employment), yielding a significant overall odds ratio of 3.66 [1.93–6.93], p < 0.0001, as shown in Fig. 2a . The test for heterogeneity was not significant (χ 2 = 4.47, p < 0.21). The four studies each had significant odds ratios for employment outcomes favouring the supported employment condition. Meta-analysis on the increase in employment rate over baseline also significantly favoured the supported employment group 4.97 [1.53–16.22], p < 0.008 (figure not shown). The meta-analytic results for follow-up rates of education for these same studies yielded an odds ratio of 1.39 [0.86–2.24], p = 0.17, as shown in Fig. 2b . None of the studies found a significant difference between the supported employment and control conditions on enrolment in education.
Three studies using a combined measure of employment and education included a quasi-experimental study comparing an early intervention programme with a supported employment component to historical control participants who received usual community mental health treatment without supported employment. In the first, 44% of the early intervention group and 15% of the control group achieved ‘full functional recovery,’ defined as either 15 h per week in paid work or full-time student at 2-year follow-up (Fowler et al. Reference Fowler, Hodgekins, Howells, Millward, Ivins, Taylor, Hackmann, Hill, Bishop and MacMillan2009a ). A second was an evaluation of an early intervention team providing supported employment that found that the rate employed or in education significantly increased from 29% at baseline to 42% at 1-year follow-up (Singh et al. Reference Singh, Grange, Vijaykrishnan, Francis, White, Fisher, Chisholm and Firn2007). A third study compared two early intervention programmes, one providing supported employment and the other not (Dudley et al. Reference Dudley, Nicholson, Stott and Spoors2014). At 12 months, a measure of any vocational or educational activity significantly favoured the programme providing supported employment. However, because the authors did not follow fixed cohorts, the findings are difficult to evaluate.
After this paper was accepted for publication, another relevant study was published online ahead of print (Craig et al. Reference Craig, Shepherd, Rinaldi, Smith, Carr, Preston and Singh2014). Although the study focus was motivational interviewing, the authors reported a 31% paid employment rate during 12-month follow-up for 134 patients served by four early intervention teams providing IPS services. If we include these data in calculating the overall employment rate for early intervention programmes providing supported employment, the overall rate decreases from 49 to 46%.
Methodological characteristics of the supported employment studies
Of the four studies included in the meta-analysis, three were randomised controlled trials (Killackey et al. Reference Killackey, Jackson and McGorry2008, Reference Killackey, Allott, Cotton, Chinnery, Sun, Collins, Massey, Baksheev and Jackson2012; Nuechterlein et al. Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Ventura, Turner, Gitlin, Gretchen-Doorly, Becker, Drake, Wallace and Libermansubmitted for publication). One used a naturalistic design comparing early intervention programmes in two jurisdictions, only one staffed with an employment specialist (Major et al. Reference Major, Hinton, Flint, Chalmers-Brown, McLoughlin and Johnson2010).
Variability in sampling can be seen across studies, as shown in Table 1. The studies differed substantially in the age eligibility criteria. In most studies, some participants were employed at the time of programme enrolment, thereby complicating the interpretation of employment outcomes. An admission criterion for two programmes was that patients had a goal of competitive employment (Porteous & Waghorn, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2007, Reference Porteous and Waghorn2009; Geoff Waghorn, personal communication, email, 2013), while in two other projects, all the patients had a goal to either get a job or complete their education (Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, McNeil, Firn, Koletsi, Perkins and Singh2004, Rinaldi et al. Reference Rinaldi, Perkins, McNeil, Hickman and Singh2010b ) (Miles Rinaldi, personal communication, 2013). The Major et al. (Reference Major, Hinton, Flint, Chalmers-Brown, McLoughlin and Johnson2010) study appears to have offered employment services to all patients who were enroled in an early intervention programme regardless of interest in employment. Nuechterlein et al. (Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Ventura, Turner, Gitlin, Gretchen-Doorly, Becker, Drake, Wallace and Libermansubmitted for publication) excluded patients with significant substance abuse and required an initial period of clinical stabilisation period before enrolment.
As group, strength of these evaluations was attention to model fidelity. All but one of the eight studies identified in Table 1 was explicitly modelled after IPS. The exception was the Major et al. (Reference Major, Hinton, Flint, Chalmers-Brown, McLoughlin and Johnson2010) study, which adopted many IPS principles without overtly labelling their services as IPS. The remaining studies all monitored services using the supported employment fidelity scale (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Becker, Drake and Vogler1997). Nevertheless, several projects also made adaptations either tailored to the population or to funding requirements. Most offered educational assistance, but did not follow a standardised supported education protocol. The supported employment programme in the Nuechterlein et al. (Reference Nuechterlein, Subotnik, Ventura, Turner, Gitlin, Gretchen-Doorly, Becker, Drake, Wallace and Libermansubmitted for publication) study augmented their IPS services with a vocational skills training group. Because of funding restrictions, the two Australian studies (Killackey et al. Reference Killackey, Jackson and McGorry2008, Reference Killackey, Allott, Cotton, Chinnery, Sun, Collins, Massey, Baksheev and Jackson2012) limited IPS services to 6 months, a departure from the IPS model.
Early intervention programmes providing unspecified vocational assistance
As shown in Table 1, we identified five evaluations of early intervention programmes offering unspecified vocational services, classified as such by the absence of any clear suggestion of the intent to follow a specific vocational model (Parlato et al. Reference Parlato, Lloyd and Bassett1999; Garety et al. Reference Garety, Craig, Dunn, Fornells-Ambrojo, Colbert, Rahaman, Read and Power2006; Kelly et al. Reference Kelly, Wellman and Sin2009; Poon et al. Reference Poon, Siu and Ming2010; Abdel-Baki et al. Reference Abdel-Baki, Létourneau, Morin and Ng2013). Four were rudimentary programme evaluations with results that were difficult to evaluate. One was a randomised controlled trial reporting significant differences on a combined measure of employment and education favouring the programme with vocational services.
Early intervention programmes without formal vocational assistance
Twelve studies evaluating early intervention programmes without formal vocational assistance included eight reporting either a measure of employment outcome (Mihalopoulos et al. Reference Mihalopoulos, Harris, Henry, Harrigan and McGorry2009; Henry et al. Reference Henry, Amminger, Harris, Yuen, Harrigan, Prosser, Schwartz, Farrelly, Herrman, Jackson and McGorry2010; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Tang, Hui, Chiu, Lam, Law, Yew, Wong, Chung, Tso, Chan, Yip, Hung and Honer2011; Eack et al. Reference Eack, Hogarty, Greenwald, Hogarty and Keshavan2011; Hegelstad et al. Reference Hegelstad, Larsen, Auestad, Evensen, Haahr, Joa, Johannesen, Langeveld, Melle, Opjordsmoen, Rossberg, Rund, Simonsen, Sundet, Vaglum, Friis and McGlashan2012) or a combined measure of employment and education (Cullberg et al. Reference Cullberg, Mattsson, Levander, Holmqvist, Tomsmark, Elingfors and Wieselgren2006; Agius et al. Reference Agius, Shah, Ramkisson, Murphy and Zaman2007; Bertelsen et al. Reference Bertelsen, Jeppesen, Petersen, Thorup, Øhlenschlæger, Le Quach, Christensen, Krarup, Jørgensen and Nordentoft2008). Four others reported changes on occupational functioning scales (Bechdolf et al. Reference Bechdolf, Wagner, Veith, Ruhrmann, Pukrop, Brockhaus-Dumke, Berning, Stamm, Janssen, Decker, Bottlender, Moller, Gaebel, Maier and Klosterkotter2007; Fowler et al. Reference Fowler, Hodgekins, Painter, Reilly, Crane, MacMillan, Mugford, Croudace and Jones2009b ; Penn et al. Reference Penn, Uzenoff, Perkins, Mueser, Hamer, Waldheter, Saade and Cook2011; Macneil et al. Reference MacNeil, Hasty, Cotton, Berk, Hallam, Kader, McGorry and Conus2012), as shown in Table 1.
Most controlled and quasi-controlled studies used treatment-as-usual control groups, which were usually less intensive services not tailored specifically to early psychosis. Such control groups were described as ‘standard’ or ‘generic’ community mental health treatment (Cullberg et al. Reference Cullberg, Mattsson, Levander, Holmqvist, Tomsmark, Elingfors and Wieselgren2006; Agius et al. Reference Agius, Shah, Ramkisson, Murphy and Zaman2007; Bertelsen et al. Reference Bertelsen, Jeppesen, Petersen, Thorup, Øhlenschlæger, Le Quach, Christensen, Krarup, Jørgensen and Nordentoft2008; Mihalopoulos et al. Reference Mihalopoulos, Harris, Henry, Harrigan and McGorry2009; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Tang, Hui, Chiu, Lam, Law, Yew, Wong, Chung, Tso, Chan, Yip, Hung and Honer2011; Macneil et al. Reference MacNeil, Hasty, Cotton, Berk, Hallam, Kader, McGorry and Conus2012). Other control groups were described as ‘enriched supportive therapy’ (Eack et al. Reference Eack, Hogarty, Greenwald, Hogarty and Keshavan2011), ‘usual methods of detection of psychosis’ (Hegelstad et al. Reference Hegelstad, Larsen, Auestad, Evensen, Haahr, Joa, Johannesen, Langeveld, Melle, Opjordsmoen, Rossberg, Rund, Simonsen, Sundet, Vaglum, Friis and McGlashan2012), supportive counselling (Bechdolf et al. Reference Bechdolf, Wagner, Veith, Ruhrmann, Pukrop, Brockhaus-Dumke, Berning, Stamm, Janssen, Decker, Bottlender, Moller, Gaebel, Maier and Klosterkotter2007), multidisciplinary case management (Fowler et al. Reference Fowler, Hodgekins, Painter, Reilly, Crane, MacMillan, Mugford, Croudace and Jones2009b ), and a comprehensive, multi-element clinic for the treatment of psychosis (Penn et al. Reference Penn, Uzenoff, Perkins, Mueser, Hamer, Waldheter, Saade and Cook2011). Methodological limitations were common in these studies, including uncertain equivalence between treatment groups. The sample retention rates ranged from 62 to 100%. The studies ranged in follow-up period from 2 to 10 years, all but one with a follow-up period of 3 years or more. Another limitation was the variability across study in the outcome measure used (e.g., time employed, full-time employment). Most studies identified employment as a secondary outcome measure, with clinical outcomes primary.
Of the seven studies with comparison groups reporting employment or employment/education rates at follow-up, five had significant results favouring early intervention services over usual services. We did not conduct meta-analysis on these studies, concluding that the results would be uninterpretable, given the great variability in measures used. For the same reasons, it was infeasible to calculate a meaningful overall employment rate or employment/education rate for this group of studies. Two of four studies examining changes in standardised occupational scales had significant results favouring early intervention services over usual services. One study with non-significant findings used a control group receiving some supported employment services, confounding the results (Fowler et al. Reference Fowler, Hodgekins, Painter, Reilly, Crane, MacMillan, Mugford, Croudace and Jones2009b ). Aggregating the findings for all 11 studies with comparison groups, seven (64%) reported significant vocational/education outcomes favouring early intervention over usual services.
Discussion
This review found that incorporating well-defined evidence-based supported employment services into comprehensive early intervention programmes for patients in early psychosis significantly increases employment rates but does not improve educational outcomes compared with programmes lacking these services. About half of all patients in the programmes offering supported employment obtain competitive jobs during follow-up compared with 29% of those receiving supported employment. Although the number of studies was small, the findings for effectiveness of supported employment were consistently positive. By contrast, we cannot draw any conclusions about the effectiveness of unspecified vocational services in early intervention programmes, given the small and descriptive literature in this area.
The third type of study examined in this review evaluated specialty early intervention services v. generic, usually less intensive, community treatment. These studies hypothesised that specialised clinical care for early psychosis would promote vocational recovery, even absent specific vocational services. This hypothesis resembles the assumption held historically by many clinicians and researchers in the psychiatric field that helping patients with severe mental illness address psychiatric symptoms through medications and psychotherapy would enable them to pursue vocational rehabilitation and to gain employment – an assumption that proved false (Bond, Reference Bond and Liberman1992). In the current review, the parallel evidence regarding early intervention programmes without an identified vocational component was inconclusive because of the huge variability in measures of employment/educational outcome. The majority of studies did find significant improvement in functional outcome for early intervention patients compared with those in usual services, usually measured over a period of years. Confounding this overall finding, however, are methodological weaknesses in this heterogeneous group of studies.
Even assuming that we were to give the most generous interpretation of the findings from the studies of the early intervention programmes without identified vocational services, the control conditions for these studies were mostly generic mental health treatment services, which were not tailored specifically to patients with early psychosis. Also unknown is the extent to which control patients received these services rather than dropped out.
By contrast, the control groups in the supported employment studies were much more stringent, examining the added effects of supported employment for patients who were all receiving early intervention services. We conclude that the impact on employment of adding supported employment to early intervention programmes is larger than that for early intervention programmes compared with usual services.
While adding supported employment services to an early intervention programme leads to better competitive employment outcomes, the ES is moderate for the difference in employment rates at follow-up compared with services as usual. Furthermore, the overall competitive employment rate at follow-up in this review of 49% for young adults receiving supported employment is less than the overall rate of 59% in a review of 15 controlled trials of IPS for adults with severe mental illness (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Drake and Becker2012b ). It would be important to understand the reasons for this apparent diminished impact of supported employment for the early psychosis population.
Several interpretations are possible: First, people with early psychosis may be less responsive to evidence-based employment interventions than adults with longer-term illnesses. This conclusion seems unlikely, given a meta-analysis showing that young adults benefit from IPS as much, if not more, than older adults (Bond et al. in press). Second, some patients with early psychosis may prioritise education over employment, thereby diluting the employment rate. Third, the early intervention studies reviewed above may not have implemented IPS supported employment with high fidelity or followed patients long enough, given that some patients initially pursued education.
The field needs longer-term and more rigorous studies of employment services within early psychosis programmes. The lack of findings for educational outcomes surprises, given the importance of educational goals in this age group, but the field lacks an evidence-based model of supported education. Researchers also should track disability benefits status, although these vary tremendously from country to country.
The cost implications of increasing employment through supported employment in early intervention programmes are enormous because young people with psychotic illnesses tend to remain disabled for decades. Worldwide, people with serious mental illnesses constitute the largest and fastest-growing group of disability beneficiaries (McAlpine & Warner, Reference McAlpine and Warner2000; Danziger et al. Reference Danziger, Frank and Meara2009). Many experts recommend refocusing policy on preventing entry to disability programmes rather than on promoting exits from these programmes (Burkhauser & Daly, Reference Burkhauser and Daly2011). Observational studies suggest that, after initial episodes of psychosis, young adults who join or remain in the labour market are more likely to forestall entry into the disability system (Cougnard et al. Reference Cougnard, Goumilloux, Monello and Verdoux2007; Krupa et al. Reference Krupa, Oyewumi, Archie, Lawson, Nandlal and Conrad2012; Drake et al. Reference Drake, Xie, Bond, McHugo and Caton2013). Two evaluations aimed at diverting new applicants for disability benefits through early interventions incorporating employment services had disappointing results (Fraker, Reference Fraker2013; Gimm et al. Reference Gimm, Hoffman and Ireys2014), but neither study used an evidence-based employment model.
Limitations
Our review has several limitations. First, although it is the most comprehensive and rigorous to date, it did not meet the full standards of a PRISMA review (Moher et al. Reference Moher, Liberati, Tetzlaff and Altman2009). For example, we did not examine publication bias or method of concealment for randomised trials, nor did we exhaustively search the grey literature. Second, study quality was highly variable. The supported employment studies were small with short follow-ups. The effects on the population and the long-term effects of supported employment interventions are almost entirely unknown. Third, with the exception of supported employment, which was usually well described and systematically monitored with a fidelity scale, many papers lacked adequate descriptions of their interventions. This deficiency is widespread in the intervention literature (Michie et al. Reference Michie, Fixsen, Grimshaw and Eccles2009). Fourth, the study methodologies were heterogeneous, using diverse measures, observational periods, and data collection procedures. The lack of methodological consistency across studies included in this review is striking and in sharp contrast to the consensus among IPS researchers on methodological standards for evaluation studies (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Goldberg, Braude, Dougherty, Daniels, Ghose, George and Delphin-Rittmon2014). Shared standards permit comparisons across studies and meta-analytic syntheses. Future early intervention studies should include a comprehensive set of employment measures, including job duration, earnings and time to first job (Bond et al. Reference Bond, Campbell and Drake2012a ). Fifth, the use of inferential statistics to evaluate differences between combined treatment and control conditions should be interpreted with caution, given multiple threats to validity, including selection and sampling biases.
Conclusions
Early intervention researchers recognise the need to include vocational interventions in programmes for early episode patients, and are now explicitly identifying IPS as the preferred model (Nordentoft et al. Reference Nordentoft, Melau, Iversen, Petersen, Jeppesen, Thorup, Bertelsen, Hjorthøj, Hastrup and Jørgensen2013). This review provides additional support for this recommendation. The potential of these programmes to reduce participation in disability programmes remains unclear.
Financial Support
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Conflict of Interest
None.
Ethical Standards
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.