American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, Vol 92(6), 2022, 673-680; doi:10.1037/ort0000645
Certified peer specialists (CPSs) are a growing workforce that uses their lived experience of a behavioral health disorders plus skills learned in formal training to deliver support services. Despite their important role in the mental health care system and research on their working conditions, experiences of burnout have not been widely studied among CPSs. This study uses survey data from CPSs who were currently employed in any type of job, providing peer support services or not. Using the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) and Areas of Worklife Survey (AWS), along with other measures of personal and job characteristics, relationships of predictors variables to burnout measures were described in unadjusted and adjusted linear regression models. Scores on each of the averaged burnout measures differed significantly between those employed in peer services jobs and those in other job types, with those in peer services jobs reporting lower exhaustion, cynicism, and higher professional efficacy. Better workload and fairness were associated with significantly lower exhaustion, and better reward and community were both associated with significantly lower cynicism. Those employed in peer services jobs had fewer signs of burnout than those in other occupations, in keeping with prior research. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)