Center for Social Innovation, Needham, Massachusetts.
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Center for Mental Health Services, Office of Consumer Affairs, Rockville, Maryland.
Am J Prev Med. 2018 Jun;54(6 Suppl 3):S258-S266. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2018.03.010.
The growth of the peer workforce in behavioral health services is bringing opportunities to organizations and institutions that serve people living with mental and substance use disorders and their families. Peer workers are defined as people in recovery from mental illness or substance use disorders or both that possess specific peer support competencies. Similar roles are identified for families of people in recovery. Peer support has been implemented in a vast range of behavioral health services, including in the relatively new use of peer support in criminal justice and emergency service environments. Behavioral health services are striving to integrate peer workers into their workforce to augment existing service delivery, in part because peer support has demonstrated effectiveness in helping people with behavioral health conditions to connect to, engage in, and be active participants in treatment and recovery support services across all levels of care. This article describes the experiences that organizations and their workforce, including peer workers, encounter as they integrate peer support services into the array of behavioral health services. Specific attention is given to the similarities and differences of services provided by peers in mental health settings and substance use settings, and implications for future directions. The article also addresses the role of peer workers in integrated behavioral and physical healthcare services.
This article is part of a supplement entitled The Behavioral Health Workforce: Planning, Practice, and Preparation, which is sponsored by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
同行工作人员在行为健康服务中的增长为服务于患有精神和物质使用障碍及其家人的组织和机构带来了机会。同行工作人员被定义为从精神疾病或物质使用障碍中康复或两者兼有的人员,他们具有特定的同行支持能力。类似的角色也被确定为康复人员的家属。同伴支持已在广泛的行为健康服务中实施,包括在刑事司法和紧急服务环境中相对较新的同伴支持使用。行为健康服务机构正在努力将同行工作人员纳入其劳动力队伍,以增加现有的服务提供,部分原因是同伴支持已被证明在帮助有行为健康问题的人联系、参与和积极参与各级护理治疗和康复支持服务方面是有效的。本文描述了组织及其工作人员(包括同行工作人员)在将同伴支持服务融入一系列行为健康服务时所遇到的经验。特别关注了在心理健康和物质使用环境中由同伴提供的服务的相似之处和不同之处,以及对未来方向的影响。本文还讨论了同伴工作人员在综合行为和身体保健服务中的作用。
本文是题为“行为健康劳动力:规划、实践和准备”的补充材料的一部分,该补充材料由美国卫生与公众服务部下属的物质滥用和精神健康服务管理局以及卫生资源和服务管理局赞助。