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Providing peer support on a men’s mental health ward: a service user narrative

Benjamin Thomas Gray (Department of Patient Experience, EP UT, Wickford, UK and Research Ambassador at Healthwatch Essex, UK)
Matthew Sisto (Department of Patient Experience, EP UT, Wickford, UK)

Mental Health and Social Inclusion

ISSN: 2042-8308

Article publication date: 11 April 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to describe peer support work in a men’s mental health unit from a lived experience and service user’s perspective. The intertwining of process (a lived experience perspective) and subject (the therapeutic value of peer support) leads to greater knowledge and insight into peer support for people with mental health problems.

Design/methodology/approach

This service user narrative draws on the extracts from a reflective journal of interactions and conversations with people with mental health problems as well as feedback from service users and staff about the value of peer support. These methods allow a first-person, service user’s, reflective and narrative account of peer support work.

Findings

Peer support work, particularly hearing voices sessions, are found to be highly therapeutic and worthwhile. They promote insight and create feelings of safety and hope in what can sometimes be a frightening and hostile ward environment. Peer support provides emotional and practical support. Sharing stories and experiences of mental illness with people leads to trust, feelings of being valued, heard and accepted as well as better experiences of care and being seen as a person first. Due to their shared experiences, peer support workers are able to befriend people with mental health problems on the ward. Peer support work bridges the gap and vacuum of care between people with mental health problems and staff. It compensates for understaffing to provide more holistic and person-centred care and support.

Originality/value

Lived experience/ service user perspectives and narratives on peer support are rare, particularly in a hospital setting. This article provides a rich, perhaps overlooked and hidden narrative on the nature of peer support work. People with mental health problems, like Ben, are often excluded from society, health and social care, education, employment and research. This narrative opens up a pathway to understanding peer support from a service user perspective.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the peer support team and other colleagues. They also thank Renee, Rosario, Charlotte, Olivia, Liz and Lauren.

Citation

Gray, B.T. and Sisto, M. (2024), "Providing peer support on a men’s mental health ward: a service user narrative", Mental Health and Social Inclusion, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/MHSI-03-2024-0036

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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