PEER SUPPORT WORKER - MATERNAL MENTAL HEALTH SERVICE
The role of Peer support (PSW) has been developed specifically for people with lived experience of mental health services. Through sharing wisdom from their own experience, the peer support worker will inspire hope in others.
For those considering this role ofPSW within the Maternal Mental Health Servicethere is a requirement for the person to have lived experience within the maternity journey.
The Maternal Mental Health service provides support to women and birthing people who have experienced loss and/or trauma within their maternity journey. As a service we provide care under 3 pillars: Midwifery, Psychology and Peer support.
This is an exciting opportunity to join an established MMHS and to use your own experience to help support others during their journey. The support provide by our PSW’s is unique and invaluable.
To use own lived experience to directly support service users within the MMHS and promote positive mental well-being.
The role of Peer Support has been developed specifically for people who have lived experience of having received care in Mental Health services. Through sharing wisdom from their own experiences, the peer support worker will inspire hope in others.
The peer support worker will act as a recovery champion and an ambassador of positive mental well-being in both clinical and non-clinical environments. There is also an expectation that the peer support worker will be involved in the on-going development of peer support worker roles including such things as training programmes and evaluations.
The peer support worker strives to empower individuals to achieve their hopes, dreams and goals by assisting them on their journey.
Mersey Care is one of the largest trusts providing physical health and mental health services in the North West, serving more than 1.4 million people across our region and are also commissioned for services that cover the North West, North Wales and the Midlands.
We offer specialist inpatient and community services that support physical and mental health and specialist inpatient mental health, learning disability, addiction and brain injury services. Mersey Care is one of only three trusts in the UK that offer high secure mental health facilities.
At the heart of all we do is our commitment to ‘perfect care’ – care that is safe, effective, positively experienced, timely, equitable and efficient. We support our staff to do the best job they can and work alongside service users, their families, and carers to design and develop future services together. We’re currently delivering a programme of organisational and service transformation to significantly improve the quality of the services we provide and safely reduce cost as we do so.
Flexible working requests will be considered for all roles.
To act as a positive role model to service users and staff members, demonstrating Trust values during the course of their work
To establish supportive and respectful relationships with people using mental health services.
To help individuals identify their own achievable and meaningful recovery goals and set recovery objectives, drawing on your mutual resources as peers and utilising a range of recovery tools, techniques and experience.
To share and promote coping, self-help and self-management techniques within the peer relationship.
To accompany service users to appointments/meetings of their choice and perform a range of practical tasks, aligned to recovery goals.
To facilitate access to community groups and networks that enable service users to participate in community activities, in order to maximise opportunities for taking on socially valued roles and positive identity.
To accompany service users to appointments/meetings of their choice and perform a range of practical tasks, aligned to recovery goals.
To provide support to service users whilst maintaining professional boundaries
To support service users to identify and overcome fears and challenges within their recovery within a relationship of empathy and trust
To liaise with carers, other health professionals, statutory and voluntary agencies in the community to enable the recovery needs of the service user group to be met
To work in collaboration with other key stakeholders and colleagues involved in the delivery of care.
Work within Trust clinical supervision guidelines.
At all times act within the limits of their competences and authority, and seek advice and guidance when required.
Ensure actions contribute to a positive and safe working culture.
Undertake appropriate administrative duties to assist the team in delivering effective and timely care, e.g. data inputting, filing, computer work, faxing, photo-copying, updating patient records on RIO.
Ensure that patient health records are maintained in accordance with national and organisational policies and within the scope of the Peer Support Workers responsibility.
To actively participate in regular line management and clinical supervision including recovery focused group supervision and to identify personal developmental needs.
To attend service user forums to help ensure that the voice of the service user is heard and the views, opinions and needs of the service users are addressed.
To participate in quality assurance measures, promoting uptake of friends and family tests, satisfaction questionnaires and other measures that review the effectiveness of service delivery. Providing genuine constructive feedback and support for continued improvement of the service.
To contribute to service development by attending ward, service and hospital level meetings with the aim to promote the service user perspective by providing feedback
Attend all statutory and mandatory training allocated.
Attend RIO training.
Adhere to all company policies and procedures.
Complete any other reasonable request.
This advert closes on Sunday 3 Nov 2024