Leveraging the Expertise of the Community: A Case for Expansion of a Peer Workforce in Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Effectiveness of Peer Paraprofessional Support
2.1. Adult Physical Health
2.2. Adult Mental Health
2.3. Child and Adolescent Physical Health
2.4. Child and Adolescent Mental Health
2.4.1. Parent-to-Parent Peer Paraprofessional Support
2.4.2. Child and Adolescent Peer Paraprofessional Support
3. The Promise of Peer Paraprofessionals for Promoting Mental Health Equity
4. Developing a Peer Paraprofessional Workforce
4.1. Training the Workforce
4.2. Sustaining the Workforce
4.3. Family Leadership Track of the Georgetown IECMH Certificate Program
Next Steps in the FLT of the IECMH Certificate Program
5. Current Study: The Landscape of Peer Paraprofessionals for Families with Young Children in DC
5.1. Methods
5.2. Qualitative Results
6. Discussion and Next Steps for Peer Paraprofessional Models for Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health
Limitations
7. Conclusions and Future Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Overview of Current Family Support Programming in DC |
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Types of Support Provided |
“... sitting down with [the client] and having the knowledge and the connections and the ability to navigate and just to be able to fill those gaps and then just starting at the top of that list [of needs] and moving down”. |
“This idea that families are not cases, and so it’s not just about connecting poor people to programs that poor people need, like social work. There’s some element of developing and helping a family to cultivate its own agency”. |
Characteristics of the Support Workforce |
Education and Experience |
“It’s really more of a community experience. It’s work experience in addition to the life experience. We do have those who are college educated, but some that do not have degrees”. |
“I’mma be honest. In reference to having a degree, I say no. I just say the experience means more because if you’ve been in a situation and you know how it feels to be without, or you’re a single mom, and you just wanna show moms or dads or caregivers where to get resources from, you don’t have to have a degree. You just gotta have passion and you gotta wanna do this work”. |
Characteristics of Programs Utilizing Support Workers |
Organizational Challenges |
“I think there’s a lot of non-billable time that’s a part of supporting that role, so it’s not just one person that we would hire. I think, in the past, what we’ve seen when we’ve incorporated peer support [workers] is that they also need a lot of support, so you need other people to be involved to make sure that they are getting the scaffolding they need in the role”. |
“It’s not a position that, right now, you can bill for, so that makes it hard to be sustainable. I think funding is a big thing”. |
System Level Infrastructure for the Support Workforce |
Establishing Professional Standards |
“If I were gonna launch a true peer navigator and not have a bachelor’s degree requirement and be pulling in people from a really diverse depth of professional experience or something. Some who may have done a lot professional work and some who maybe have done very little, but have this really great lived experience, then I would imagine that if the city could provide some kind of structured modules of these are the basics of peer support and confidentiality, and I don’t know. Just those types of things”. |
Developing the Profession |
“It may be helpful to have a peer-to-peer parity program… it’d be nice for all of them to get together and talk about the strengths, the challenges, and some of the struggles associated with it. I think that another area that will be very helpful is for them to process the trauma that is induced by the work. If I had experienced what you’re experiencing, then I can be triggered by supporting you. Some place that captures some of that and help them with managing that”. |
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Robertson, H.A.; Biel, M.G.; Hayes, K.R.; Snowden, S.; Curtis, L.; Charlot-Swilley, D.; Clauson, E.S.; Gavins, A.; Sisk, C.M.; Bravo, N.; et al. Leveraging the Expertise of the Community: A Case for Expansion of a Peer Workforce in Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 5921. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20115921
Robertson HA, Biel MG, Hayes KR, Snowden S, Curtis L, Charlot-Swilley D, Clauson ES, Gavins A, Sisk CM, Bravo N, et al. Leveraging the Expertise of the Community: A Case for Expansion of a Peer Workforce in Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(11):5921. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20115921
Chicago/Turabian StyleRobertson, Hillary A., Matthew G. Biel, Katherine R. Hayes, Sara Snowden, Latisha Curtis, Dominique Charlot-Swilley, Elyssa S. Clauson, Arrealia Gavins, Caslin M. Sisk, Noel Bravo, and et al. 2023. "Leveraging the Expertise of the Community: A Case for Expansion of a Peer Workforce in Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 11: 5921. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20115921
APA StyleRobertson, H. A., Biel, M. G., Hayes, K. R., Snowden, S., Curtis, L., Charlot-Swilley, D., Clauson, E. S., Gavins, A., Sisk, C. M., Bravo, N., Coates, E. E., & Domitrovich, C. E. (2023). Leveraging the Expertise of the Community: A Case for Expansion of a Peer Workforce in Child, Adolescent, and Family Mental Health. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(11), 5921. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20115921