Åkerblom Kristina Bakke, Mohn-Haugen Torbjørn, Agdal Rita, Ness Ottar
Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway.
Erfaringssentrum, National Peer Worker Organization, Oslo, Norway.
Int J Ment Health Syst. 2023 Jun 12;17(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s13033-023-00588-5.
Citizens with experience and knowledge about what it is like to use mental health and substance use services are increasingly employed within similar services as peer workers. Peer workers are portrayed as achieving societal obligations and help ensure that the outputs from service provision are more effective. Even though peer workers have worked in mental health and substance use services for a while, few studies have focused on exploring managers' experiences and perspectives about involving peer workers. This knowledge is needed because these managers can enable and hinder equitable involvement and collaboration with peer workers.
A qualitative explorative study was chosen to explore the following research question: How do managers in Norwegian mental health and substance use services experience, relate to, and embrace peer workers as assets in these services? A researcher (Ph.D. student) and a coresearcher (peer worker) conducted four online focus groups with a strategic selection of 17 Norwegian mental health and substance use services managers who had some experience with the involvement of peer workers in their organizations.
The results identified using systematic text condensation are as follows: [1] Peer workers boost the ongoing shift toward increased service user involvement. [2] Peer workers are highly valued in the service transformation process. [3] Managers involve peer workers as partners in co-creation. The results show that managers connect with peer workers and facilitate their involvement in collaborative activities across the service cycle. Peer workers' proximity to service users and bridging capacity is highlighted as the reasons for their involvement. Thus, peer workers are involved in co-defining challenges, co-designing potential solutions, co-delivering those service solutions, and, sometimes, co-assessing service solutions to rethink and improve services. As such, peer workers are considered partners in co-creation.
As managers involve peer workers, they increasingly discover peer workers' value, and because peer workers are involved, they increase their skills and capacity for collaboration. This research strengthens the knowledge base of the perceived value of peer workers' roles, bringing in new perspectives from management about utilizing and evaluating peer worker roles.
对使用心理健康和物质使用服务有经验和了解的公民越来越多地作为同伴工作者受雇于类似服务机构。同伴工作者被描述为履行社会义务,并有助于确保服务提供的成果更有效。尽管同伴工作者在心理健康和物质使用服务领域工作了一段时间,但很少有研究关注探索管理者对同伴工作者参与的经验和看法。之所以需要这些知识,是因为这些管理者能够促进或阻碍与同伴工作者的公平参与和合作。
选择了一项定性探索性研究来探讨以下研究问题:挪威心理健康和物质使用服务的管理者如何体验、看待并接纳同伴工作者作为这些服务中的资产?一名研究人员(博士生)和一名共同研究者(同伴工作者)与17名挪威心理健康和物质使用服务管理者进行了四次在线焦点小组讨论,这些管理者在其组织中对同伴工作者的参与有一定经验。
使用系统文本浓缩法得出的结果如下:[1]同伴工作者推动了服务使用者参与度不断提高的持续转变。[2]同伴工作者在服务转型过程中受到高度重视。[3]管理者将同伴工作者作为共同创造者的伙伴来参与。结果表明,管理者与同伴工作者建立联系,并促进他们参与服务周期中的协作活动。同伴工作者与服务使用者的亲近关系和沟通能力被视为他们参与的原因。因此,同伴工作者参与共同界定挑战、共同设计潜在解决方案、共同提供这些服务解决方案,有时还共同评估服务解决方案以重新思考和改进服务。因此,同伴工作者被视为共同创造的伙伴。
随着管理者让同伴工作者参与进来,他们越来越发现同伴工作者的价值,而且由于同伴工作者的参与,他们提高了协作技能和能力。这项研究加强了对同伴工作者角色感知价值的知识基础,引入了管理层关于利用和评估同伴工作者角色的新视角。