Barr Karlen R, Townsend Michelle L, Grenyer Brin F S
School of Psychology and Illawarra Health and Medical Research Institute, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW Australia.
Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregul. 2020 Sep 2;7:20. doi: 10.1186/s40479-020-00135-5. eCollection 2020.
Peer support is a recovery oriented approach where consumers and carers are introduced to people with lived experience of the disorder who have recovered. Paid roles within health services for such consumer peer workers and carer peer workers (or 'specialists') are increasingly common. To date specific studies on such peer support for consumers with borderline personality disorder (BPD) and their carers has not been conducted.
This qualitative study used interviews to explore perceptions and models of peer support for BPD from the perspectives of 12 consumers, 12 carers, and 12 mental health professionals. Participant responses were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis within a phenomenological methodology.
All groups described how consumer peer workers may provide hope, connection, and validation to a consumer's lived experience. Offering both traditional mental health treatment plus peer support, and giving consumers choice regarding a consumer peer worker was welcomed. Differences in opinion were found regarding the consumer peer worker's role in relation to the mental health team, including whether consumer peer workers should access medical records. Perspectives differed regarding the consumer peer worker and carer peer worker positions, highlighting potential role confusion. Carers discussed the value of receiving support from carer peer workers and consumer peer workers. Mental health professionals described how consumer peer workers can experience workplace stigma and problems with boundary setting, and acknowledged a need for peer workers to be valued by having a duty of care and confidentiality code to follow and be offered supervision.
Two models of peer support for BPD emerged: an integrated model where consumer peer workers work within the mental health team, and a complementary model where consumer peer workers are separate from the mental health team. Based on these findings we provide recommendations for services to help support such peer work for consumers with BPD and their carers.
同伴支持是一种以康复为导向的方法,让消费者和护理人员与已康复的有该疾病亲身经历的人相识。在卫生服务机构中,为这类消费者同伴工作者和护理人员同伴工作者(或“专家”)设立带薪岗位的情况越来越普遍。迄今为止,尚未针对边缘型人格障碍(BPD)消费者及其护理人员的此类同伴支持进行具体研究。
这项定性研究通过访谈,从12名消费者、12名护理人员和12名心理健康专业人员的角度,探讨对BPD同伴支持的看法和模式。采用现象学方法,通过反思性主题分析对参与者的回答进行分析。
所有群体都描述了消费者同伴工作者如何为消费者的亲身经历带来希望、联系和认可。提供传统心理健康治疗加同伴支持,并让消费者对消费者同伴工作者有选择权,这受到欢迎。在消费者同伴工作者与心理健康团队的关系方面,包括消费者同伴工作者是否应查阅病历,存在意见分歧。对于消费者同伴工作者和护理人员同伴工作者的职位,观点也有所不同,凸显了潜在的角色混淆。护理人员讨论了从护理人员同伴工作者和消费者同伴工作者那里获得支持的价值。心理健康专业人员描述了消费者同伴工作者如何会经历工作场所的污名化和边界设定问题,并承认需要通过制定护理责任和保密守则并提供监督,来让同伴工作者得到重视。
出现了两种针对BPD的同伴支持模式:一种是综合模式,即消费者同伴工作者在心理健康团队中工作;另一种是补充模式,即消费者同伴工作者与心理健康团队分开。基于这些发现,我们为服务机构提供建议,以帮助支持为BPD消费者及其护理人员开展的此类同伴工作。