Publication | Closed Access
Mental health service users’ experiences of returning to paid employment
77
Citations
8
References
2007
Year
DisabilityEducationHealth PsychologyMental HealthWorker HealthSocial WorkWork AdjustmentWorker Well-beingEmployment SupportMental Health CounselingOccupational Health PsychologyHealth Services ResearchJob SearchHealth SciencesJob SatisfactionEmploymentPsychiatryNursingCommunity Mental HealthWorkforce DevelopmentOccupational TherapyAdult Mental HealthUnemployment
Research into mental health and employment has focused largely on people who are unemployed. This paper reports the experiences of 20 clients of employment support agencies who had succeeded in returning to work. A number of barriers to getting back to work were identified, but receiving employment support could enable people to overcome them. There was consistency with previous studies of factors associated with high and low levels of job satisfaction. Even those participants who were less satisfied with their jobs identified benefits and none described any negative effects. The quality of the employment support provided was important, including advice and counselling during the job search, enabling informed choice about disclosure and support in work. Job retention targets are required for funding programmes in addition to placement targets. Further research into the timing and processes of disclosure and into occupational health screening processes would be helpful.
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