Mbao Mbita, Collins-Pisano Caroline, Fortuna Karen
Simmons University, School of Social Work, Boston, MA, United States.
Dartmouth College, Lebanon, NH, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2021 Mar 2;5(3):e22950. doi: 10.2196/22950.
Middle-aged and older adults with mental health conditions have a high likelihood of experiencing comorbid physical health conditions, premature nursing home admissions, and early death compared with the general population of adults aged 50 years or above. An emerging workforce of peer support specialists aged 50 years or above or "older adult peer support specialists" is increasingly using technology to deliver peer support services to address both the mental health and physical health needs of middle-aged and older adults with a diagnosis of a serious mental illness.
This exploratory qualitative study examined older adult peer support specialists' text message exchanges with middle-aged and older adults with a diagnosis of a serious mental illness and their nonmanualized age-related contributions to a standardized integrated medical and psychiatric self-management intervention.
Older adult peer support specialists exchanged text messages with middle-aged and older adults with a diagnosis of a serious mental illness as part of a 12-week standardized integrated medical and psychiatric self-management smartphone intervention. Text message exchanges between older adult peer support specialists (n=3) and people with serious mental illnesses (n=8) were examined (mean age 68.8 years, SD 4.9 years). A total of 356 text messages were sent between older adult peer support specialists and service users with a diagnosis of a serious mental illness. Older adult peer support specialists sent text messages to older participants' smartphones between 8 AM and 10 PM on weekdays and weekends.
Five themes emerged from text message exchanges related to older adult peer support specialists' age-related contributions to integrated self-management, including (1) using technology to simultaneously manage mental health and physical health issues; (2) realizing new coping skills in late life; (3) sharing roles as parents and grandparents; (4) wisdom; and (5) sharing lived experience of difficulties with normal age-related changes (emerging).
Older adult peer support specialists' lived experience of aging successfully with a mental health challenge may offer an age-related form of peer support that may have implications for promoting successful aging in older adults with a serious mental illness.
与50岁及以上的普通成年人相比,患有心理健康问题的中老年人更容易出现合并身体疾病、过早入住养老院以及过早死亡的情况。一支由50岁及以上的同伴支持专家组成的新兴劳动力队伍,即“老年同伴支持专家”,正越来越多地利用技术提供同伴支持服务,以满足被诊断患有严重精神疾病的中老年人的心理健康和身体健康需求。
这项探索性定性研究考察了老年同伴支持专家与被诊断患有严重精神疾病的中老年人之间的短信交流,以及他们对标准化综合医疗和精神自我管理干预的非手册化年龄相关贡献。
作为一项为期12周的标准化综合医疗和精神自我管理智能手机干预的一部分,老年同伴支持专家与被诊断患有严重精神疾病的中老年人进行了短信交流。对老年同伴支持专家(n = 3)和患有严重精神疾病的人(n = 8)之间的短信交流进行了研究(平均年龄68.8岁,标准差4.9岁)。老年同伴支持专家和被诊断患有严重精神疾病的服务使用者之间共发送了356条短信。老年同伴支持专家在工作日和周末的上午8点至晚上10点之间向老年参与者的智能手机发送短信。
从短信交流中出现了五个主题,与老年同伴支持专家对综合自我管理的年龄相关贡献有关,包括:(1)利用技术同时管理心理健康和身体健康问题;(2)在晚年实现新的应对技能;(3)分享作为父母和祖父母的角色;(4)智慧;(5)分享与正常年龄相关变化相关的困难生活经历(新出现)。
老年同伴支持专家在面临心理健康挑战的情况下成功衰老的生活经历,可能提供一种与年龄相关的同伴支持形式,这可能对促进患有严重精神疾病的老年人成功衰老具有启示意义。