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NASW Practice Snapshot:
Consumer-Providers In The Workplace
Office of Social Work Specialty Practice
Two previous “Snapshot” articles raised questions and
topics for discussion about the increasing number of consumers joining
the ranks of employees in the mental health field. As we contemplate
questions about confidential information and boundary issues, we
need to also look at the potential benefits of consumers obtaining
proper training and joining the workplace as providers. The
two previous “Snapshots” are accessible for reference
at:
http://www.socialworkers.org/practice/behavioral_health/0505snapshot.asp
http://www.socialworkers.org/practice/behavioral_health/0405snapshot.asp
KNOWLEDGE:
Consumers can bring to the workplace a wealth of knowledge about
how clients perceive our actions. Co-workers are in a better
position than consumers to give us feedback about how what we say
and do might be received and interpreted. Consumers may feel
uncomfortable telling us how they interpret our words, particularly
if the words are unintentionally hurtful, yet those interpretations
are important to understand. A provider may not recognize specific
cultural or linguistic interpretations associated with a statement
or phrase that they use. Or a provider may not recognize how
an innocent action, like lighting a fire in a barbeque grill, could
create flashbacks of trauma for an individual. Consumers who
have become providers are in a unique position to give feedback from
the consumer’s perspective, while associating with co-workers
as peers.
NEW ENERGY AND ENTHUSIASM:
Consumer-providers are, like many social workers, often full of
ideals and enthusiasm, which can potentially be invigorating for
an agency and existing workers. Employees’ initial excitement
for their work often dwindles over a period of years though. Having
newly trained consumers join us as providers in the field can help
remind us why we entered the social work field in the first place,
by extolling to us the success that people can achieve in their lives
with the assistance of social workers. Such individuals will
present the unique experiences of having been in the place of needing
the help of social workers, taking that help, going into an educational
program, and then giving back in the same profession that helped
them. Any new employee who has just completed an educational
program is likely to benefit from continued direction and grounding,
but they can also provide new sparks of enthusiasm, and help boost
the energy of an organization’s staff. Social workers
can choose how to handle this new energy, but one of the options
available is to use it to create new excitement within an organization.
LEARNING:
Perhaps most important, having trained consumer-providers in our
organizations can provide us with opportunities to learn. Consumers
invariably will bring new and different perspectives to the table
about which we may not have previously—or at least recently—given
any thought, such as how user-friendly and/or modernized older policies
or forms may be. New consumer-providers may also stimulate
us to view issues from different perspectives than our own—i.e.
that of someone for whom experiencing stigma has become a normal
part of their life. Certainly, there may be added challenges
when introducing consumers into an organization as co-workers, but
this is the case with nearly any new employee.
Difficult changes often come with great positive potential if one
can get past the initial hesitations. The mental health service
delivery system will continue to change, as the Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration continues to work towards a
transformation of the mental health system (SAMHSA, 2005; NASW, 2005). For
the well-being of service recipients, however, it is critical that
anyone who provides services receives proper training and certification
and, with proper supervision, performs only those tasks for which
they have been trained. Programs are increasingly developing
across the country to train and certify consumers to perform certain
roles as providers, in some cases given the title Mental Health
Peer Support Specialists. Some programs are localized
in counties, and others are developing at the state level. When
properly implemented with training and supervision, having consumers
in roles as providers has the potential to benefit both consumers
and providers in the field.
REFERENCES:
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- National Association of Social Workers, Office of Social Work
Specialty Practice, (2005). Social work snapshot: the
transformation of the mental health system. Retrieved from: http://www.socialworkers.org/practice/behavioral_health/1005snapshot.asp
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA),
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2005). Transforming
mental health care in America. Federal action
agenda: First steps (DHHS Publication No. SMA-05-4060).
Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
NASW, January 2006
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