Taking a Gamble for High Rewards? Management Perspectives on the Value of Mental Health Peer Workers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Design
2.2. Ethics
2.3. Participation and Recruitment
2.4. Procedure
2.5. Data Collection and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Benefits to Service Users
…we actually have people [peers] in our team [that] do hear voices, that still require hospitalisations at times …and they work and they have meaningful lives and they’re having those conversations with our consumers about that openly and people look at that and they go ‘wow’…what it does for people—‘ok this may not be my life forever, there’s actually hope here that something can change, even when things are really challenging’—Larry
…[going from] people [service users] spending at least 70% of their time in hospital to having 0% hospital admission and at least 30% of them not even being case managed and we’re talking about people [who were] being case managed for 15 years and heavily case managed—Bella
3.2. Benefits for the Organisation and Colleagues in Traditional Roles
…there is evidence that shows having a recovery support [peer] worker has driven a positive change, not just for the consumers [service users]—but within the clinical workforce. The culture of the clinical workforce in that team has changed—Dorrell
…this is the function of peer support, so you know it is this person’s job to make sure we’ve got consistent [recovery focused] language and that if they [peers] hear anything and it doesn’t sound like the correct sort of language we should be using, it’s their job to talk to the team about it—Oscar
…it’s a deeper understanding of what the stigma issues are. Stigma’s not something that you just see, it’s something that’s ingrained, it’s something that’s in everybody’s psyche …I think it’s well worth going through the process [employing peer staff] even if it was only just to break down the stigma—Josh
3.3. Limitations of Peer Work
…when we first started there was a lot of fear from the staff that ‘oh shit are they gonna be taking over our office’ you know ‘they better not be doing what we do’—Sam
…some of the positions themselves are, tokenistic is probably not an unfair word, or contrived in a way. There are also other organisations or other individuals for whom that [peer employment] really still is very much at the ‘you tick box’ kind of point—Matt
…if we have people [peer workers] talking to people [service users] about strategies for wellness absolutely they need to be able to manage their own. I’ve seen it have a very detrimental impact when we have an employee who was unwell talking about their stress and their un-wellness and their frustrations in front of consumers [service users]…they’re not coming here to listen to somebody else’s problems—Larry
...the peers are actually more proactive which I think is great because they know themselves and they know their limitations whereas sometimes some other staff [in traditional roles] think they’re ok and they’re not as attuned or aware of their own limitations—Sarah
3.4. Practical Strategies and Supports
3.4.1. Recruitment
We really want people to come in with all their quirks and bits and bobs that make them interesting, because we think the work we do is the work of relationships and people actually have much better relationships with humans than they do with ‘roles’—Matt
…as we’re recruiting new people we’re asking more questions, we’re a little bit smarter and it’s something that you learn over time... we now know what the right questions are to ask people.—Bruce
I think it was very much ‘we’re getting this money to do this, it’s gonna be great to have this fresh idea’ …rushed like a bull out a gate—just get people in positions and not actually think about whether they’re right for that position—Octavia
3.4.2. Flexible Workplaces/Reasonable Adjustments
…there is reasonable adjustment, we haven’t had to use that a great deal or call on it a great deal, cos I think people feel fairly supported and in a flexible working environment anyway…I don’t think any of us want to be wrapped in cotton wool and ‘kiddied’ through our roles, because that detracts from the roles—Alex
All of our support structures need to support all of our staff … because who’s to say a person doesn’t have a lived experience or a person does have a lived experience?—Josh
…when you shift the frame and you’re introducing [support or policies] in terms of a whole of organisation, what you’re actually doing is de-stigmatising as well—Penny
3.4.3. Supervision
…it’s not only is the worker doing okay but it’s also is the organisation doing okay by the worker, and I think supervision is a medium whereby that at least can be checked—Pippa
4. Discussion
4.1. Value of Role: Benefits of Peer Roles
4.2. Limitations of Peer Roles and Strategies to Maximise Benefits
4.3. Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. of Participants | Type of Role Participants Were Employed in |
---|---|
11 | Traditional executive or senior management roles within not for profit organisations |
8 | Traditional executive or senior management roles within government organisations |
5 | Designated peer executive or senior management roles within not for profit organisations |
3 | Designated peer executive or senior management roles within government organisations |
2 | Designated carer executive or senior management roles within government organisations |
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Byrne, L.; Roennfeldt, H.; O’Shea, P.; Macdonald, F. Taking a Gamble for High Rewards? Management Perspectives on the Value of Mental Health Peer Workers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15040746
Byrne L, Roennfeldt H, O’Shea P, Macdonald F. Taking a Gamble for High Rewards? Management Perspectives on the Value of Mental Health Peer Workers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(4):746. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15040746
Chicago/Turabian StyleByrne, Louise, Helena Roennfeldt, Peri O’Shea, and Fiona Macdonald. 2018. "Taking a Gamble for High Rewards? Management Perspectives on the Value of Mental Health Peer Workers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 4: 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15040746
APA StyleByrne, L., Roennfeldt, H., O’Shea, P., & Macdonald, F. (2018). Taking a Gamble for High Rewards? Management Perspectives on the Value of Mental Health Peer Workers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(4), 746. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15040746