2020
DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02688-9
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Workplace experiences of mental health consumer peer workers in New South Wales, Australia: a survey study exploring job satisfaction, burnout and turnover intention

Abstract: Background: Consumer peer workers are individuals with lived experience of mental health issues and recovery who are employed to use their lived experience to support others. The consumer peer workforce has expanded substantially in recent years. While some research has explored the workplace experiences of peer workers, no previous studies have explored job satisfaction, burnout or turnover intention for this workforce. Methods: Consumer peer workers in New South Wales, Australia were invited to complete a su… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 43 publications
(120 reference statements)
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“…Social capital and psychological capital exert influences on entrepreneurial performance ( 14 ), entrepreneurial intentions ( 71 ), quality of life ( 72 ), and second victim severity ( 73 ). Therefore, future research can explore more from the dual perspectives of psychological capital and social capital, such as job performance and job burnout ( 74 , 75 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social capital and psychological capital exert influences on entrepreneurial performance ( 14 ), entrepreneurial intentions ( 71 ), quality of life ( 72 ), and second victim severity ( 73 ). Therefore, future research can explore more from the dual perspectives of psychological capital and social capital, such as job performance and job burnout ( 74 , 75 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The peer worker benchmarking exercise in England estimated sickness absences from work for peer workers in 2019 at 22% [ 29 ], considerably higher than levels of absence across the mental health workforce. Noting the possibility that peer workers were largely compared, in that exercise, to established professionals in more secure, better supported posts, this was not the case in our study, reflecting similar findings from Australia [ 28 ]. This variation in absence rates suggests that other factors, perhaps relating to working conditions [ 52 ] or the organisational support and training provided for peer workers [ 53 , 54 ], might be impacting absence and turnover.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…A longitudinal study of burnout among 152 peer workers in veterans’ mental health in the US indicated that levels of burnout were similar to other mental health workers and that, while levels of burnout increased in the first 6 months of employment, this increase was not observed over the first year of employment [ 27 ]. A recent survey of 67 peer workers in one state in Australia indicated that job satisfaction, burnout and turnover intention for peer workers was not significantly different to other mental health workers [ 28 ]. In contrast, recent benchmarking data from the UK, among 862 peer workers in National Health Service (NHS) mental health services, indicated substantially higher levels of staff absence and turnover than in the NHS workforce as a whole [ 29 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, our data suggested that mattering did not have any direct effect on turnover intention. This is inconsistent with some findings, such as the one by Richards et al [4], Haizlip et al [28], as well as Reece et al [3], who stated that the sense of mattering at work predicts the general mental well-being at work, protect the employees from burnout and work-related stress, two main predictors of turnover intention [5], [35]- [37]. In our defense, despite we agree that mattering holds a key role in mental health at work, we did not try to prove it any further.…”
Section: Discussion and Implicationmentioning
confidence: 77%