Abstract
Nursing homes play an important role in the community-based care of chronic mental patients, yet there is little research in that setting. The present study gathered and analyzed descriptive data on 20 nursing homes in a large urban area, including data about structure, staffing, policy, treatment, residents, discharge, psychosocial climate, and neighborhood characteristics. Results suggested a clear difference between skilled nursing versus intermediate care facilities, with the latter playing a larger role in caring for mental patients. More important, data suggested such facilities play primarily a custodial rather than treatment role, and that managers expect patients in nursing homes to stay indefinitely. In view of this, our justifications for community care, such as social integration, need to be examined anew.