Present Affiliation: Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney School of Health Sciences, Office J120, Cumberland Campus, 75 East Street, Lidcombe, Sydney, NSW, 2141, Australia.
Present Affiliation: Mental Health Services, Sydney Local Health District, Concord, NSW, Australia.
BMC Psychiatry. 2020 Jun 1;20(1):270. doi: 10.1186/s12888-020-02688-9.
Consumer peer workers are individuals with lived experience of mental health issues and recovery who are employed to use their lived experience to support others. The consumer peer workforce has expanded substantially in recent years. While some research has explored the workplace experiences of peer workers, no previous studies have explored job satisfaction, burnout or turnover intention for this workforce.
Consumer peer workers in New South Wales, Australia were invited to complete a survey designed to explore their workplace experiences. The survey included measures of job satisfaction, burnout, turnover intention, job demands and job resources, and satisfaction with supervision, professional development and opportunities for career progression. Questions also explored positive and negative aspects of positions. Analyses included exploration of the relationships between of job satisfaction, burnout, turnover intention, job demands and job resources as well as tabulation of common positive and negative aspects of positions. Results were also compared with findings from a previous study exploring workplace experiences of other mental health workers.
A total of 67 peer workers participated in the study. Overall job satisfaction, burnout (disengagement and exhaustion) and turnover intention for peer workers was not significantly different to other mental health workers. Job satisfaction, disengagement, exhaustion and turnover intention were all significantly inter-related. Job resources of social support, job control, feedback, and rewards and recognition were associated with positive workplace experiences and the job demand of "physical environment" was most substantially associated with poorer workplace experiences. The most common positive aspect of positions was "connecting with consumers" and the most common negative aspect of positions was "attitudes of clinicians / workplace culture". Access to supervision from a senior peer worker was associated with more positive workplace experiences.
This research demonstrates that while consumer peer workers do not appear to experience poorer job satisfaction or higher levels of burnout or turnover intention than other mental health workers, a range of challenges do exist. Efforts to further expand the peer workforce (especially senior peer worker roles) and to promote more positive attitudes and workplace cultures are likely to promote better workplace experiences for peer workers.
消费者同行工作人员是指具有心理健康问题和康复经验的个人,他们受雇利用自己的经验来支持他人。近年来,消费者同行工作队伍已经大幅扩大。虽然一些研究探讨了同行工作者的工作场所经历,但以前没有研究探讨过这个工作队伍的工作满意度、倦怠或离职意向。
澳大利亚新南威尔士州的消费者同行工作者被邀请完成一项旨在探讨其工作场所经历的调查。该调查包括对工作满意度、倦怠(脱离和疲惫)、离职意向、工作需求和工作资源以及对监督、专业发展和职业发展机会的满意度的衡量。问题还探讨了职位的积极和消极方面。分析包括探索工作满意度、倦怠、离职意向、工作需求和工作资源之间的关系,以及列出职位的常见积极和消极方面。结果还与一项探讨其他心理健康工作者工作场所经历的先前研究的结果进行了比较。
共有 67 名同行工作者参加了这项研究。同行工作者的整体工作满意度、倦怠(脱离和疲惫)和离职意向与其他心理健康工作者没有显著差异。工作满意度、脱离、疲惫和离职意向均存在显著的相互关系。社会支持、工作控制、反馈、奖励和认可等工作资源与积极的工作场所经历有关,而“物理环境”这一工作需求与较差的工作场所经历关系最为密切。职位的最常见积极方面是“与消费者建立联系”,最常见的消极方面是“临床医生的态度/工作场所文化”。获得资深同行工作者的监督与更积极的工作场所经历有关。
这项研究表明,尽管消费者同行工作者的工作满意度或倦怠或离职意向似乎没有其他心理健康工作者那么差,但确实存在一系列挑战。进一步扩大同行工作队伍(特别是资深同行工作者角色)并促进更积极的态度和工作场所文化的努力,可能会促进同行工作者更好的工作场所经历。