Peer Employment: The Next Level

May 24, 2017

10 am - 1 pm

Administrative Professionals Session

What does a peer do?

●Builds relations and collaborations

●Shares experiences

●Connects to resources

●Helps bridge gaps in recovery plans

●Makes self available to other staff as well as to mental health consumers

●Uses their skills and abilities

●Translates the world / what is expected from you, what are others and your understanding

●Builds relationships through personal connections (neighborhood member)

What does a peer NOT do?

●Prescribe

●Invade privacy - let peer “share” on their own time

●Go outside their skills, boundaries

●Judge others

●Fix others

●Take care of supervisors and coworkers’ needs (Those who judge or make fun of consumers, for example)

●Assessments

●Treat

What are the assumptions about peers?

●I have to “protect” them

●“So many accommodations”

●Needy/emotional

●Bring “emotional” baggage

●Need outside org. support

●Won’t fit in

●Peers can only work with other peers

●Nepotism

●Peers can’t grow in the organization because they aren’t smart enough

●They are not professional. No boundaries, less than.

●Not as “competent”

●Are “different” from other employees

●Cannot be reliable due to “instability”

What do peers need to be successful?

●Recognize their strengths

●To be “seen”

●To know that you want them to succeed

●Solid understanding of their soul and role responsibility (like everyone else!)

●Strong relationship with 1) Immediate supervisor, 2) Peer group (“peers” and non-”peers” alike), and 3) Integration into the organization.

●Support from managers

●Access to resources and clinical staff

●Employer awareness, support, and encouragement

Hiring for Diversity of Experience

●Spirit program

●Clubhouse transitional program

●Berkeley drop-in center

●Outreach to people within clinics

●Recovery House

●Partners that serve target population

●AA / NA / OA

●Homeless outreach

●Black Chamber of Commerce

●Service organizations

●Youth groups, colleges

●Social media

●Marketing strategies - “being seen”

Interview Questions

●You were a volunteer with ____ program… what skills and strengths do you have?

●We serve people who are, or have been, in acute crisis. What kind of experience - personal or professional - do you have with this population?

●Can you tell me about your experiences with the mental health system?

●What unique combination do you bring to the position?

●What kind of challenges do you think your mental health clients will have when joining the workforce?

●Describe a job/work situation which created a dilemma for you.

○What was the dilemma?

○How did you think about it?

○Did you consult about it? Why/why not?

○How did you proceed?

○What was the outcome?

●What are your leadership skills and style?

Take-Aways

●Circulate job postings to diverse organizations

●Use peer questions at organization

●Bring staff speaker and resources to organization

●Recruit outside of mental health system

●Take Wellness Works

●Absorb

Supervisors Session

Challenges to Address

●Supervisors don’t always have lived experience

●Need to differentiate clinical vs. peer role

●Cultivate understanding and empathy among supervisors

●We want you to “peer” but don’t “peer too much”

●Organizational and knowledge gaps for staff/supervisors

●More training/information needed on how to support mental health in the workplace

●Increase motivation to learn more about the peer experience and how to support it

●Peer experience can “disappear” in clinical culture because it is drowned out by clinical/medical model language and culture

●Difficult to find a balance between support and disciplinary action

●Job descriptions and hiring need to be done well to set supervisors up for success - “front-end work” must be executed correctly

●Over-supporting a peer to the detriment of the rest of the team

●“Us vs. them” mentality

●Stigma related to peer experience

●Lording one’s power in a peer position over other peers and harming them in the process

Self-Care for Supervisors

●Look at the policies and procedures to understand expectations and workplace culture when you start a new position

●Transparency & direct communication

●Choose when & how to come out with your peer experience, and be prepared for the possibility of discrimination

●Peer consultation groups

Tools to Share

●Trauma stewardship

●Wellness Works training

●Mutual peer support

●Transparency and direct communication

●Clinicians coming out with lived experience

●The Stability Network - professionals with lived mental health experience who do public speaking events

●Educate the entire workplace on recovery and importance of peers

●Make the entire organization healthier

●Language matters! MHASF presentation (1.5 - 3 hours) that talks about words and why they matter

●Patrick Corrigan - Honest, Open, Proud

●Laurie Ashcroft - Weekly Doses

●Working Well Together

●Peer consultation group

●MHSA-funded innovation project - Collective Wisdom

Feedback - Overall

Pluses

●Inviting dynamic and safe environment

●Loved the passion of the presenters

●I enjoyed how interactive this was

●Peer to peer check-ins

●Good process

Deltas

●A little more time

●Food

●I feel claustrophobic in this building