It's Like Adding a Drop of Ink to Milk and Shaking It: Newly Certified Peer Specialist Reflections on Lived Recovery Expertise and Professional Identity.
Elizabeth Siantz, Shanaya Fox, Emily Rougelot, Morgan Pelot, Laysha Ostrow
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Self-disclosure of lived recovery experiences is a cornerstone of peer support work. However, few studies have explored how early career certified peer specialists (CPSs) integrate or plan to integrate their own lived recovery experiences into their CPS work, or the challenges they expect to experience when doing so. In this qualitative study, we explore how early career CPSs use their lived recovery experience and challenges that accompany self-disclosure.
Methods: Qualitative data were collected as part of multistate, 3-year observational prospective cohort study of CPS graduate employment trajectories. We conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with a subsample of early-career CPSs about their transition to the workforce; this study reports on interview material focused on how participants use and expect to use their recovery experiences. Data were analyzed using thematic and content analysis informed by constant comparative methods.
Results: N = 25 individuals participated in an interview. While participants generally felt positive about sharing their personal recovery stories in their CPS role, some reported potential challenges they expect to experience, such as misalignment of recovery experiences or being re-traumatized when sharing their recovery stories with clients and coworkers.
Conclusion: That study participants held mixed feelings about sharing lived experience suggests that the peer support workforce needs early career professional support, such as peer-to-peer supervision models that focus on CPS wellbeing, in addition to job performance.
期刊介绍:
Community Mental Health Journal focuses on the needs of people experiencing serious forms of psychological distress, as well as the structures established to address those needs. Areas of particular interest include critical examination of current paradigms of diagnosis and treatment, socio-structural determinants of mental health, social hierarchies within the public mental health systems, and the intersection of public mental health programs and social/racial justice and health equity. While this is the journal of the American Association for Community Psychiatry, we welcome manuscripts reflecting research from a range of disciplines on recovery-oriented services, public health policy, clinical delivery systems, advocacy, and emerging and innovative practices.