Title: SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT
1SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT
- EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE
- Training for Practitioners
2Competitive Employment for People with Severe
Mental Illness
- Say they want to work 70
- Are currently working lt15
- Current access to supported employment lt5
3What Is Evidence-Based Practice?
- A practice validated through rigorous research
- Has guidelines describing critical ingredients
- Ideally, has been successfully implemented in a
wide range of settings
4Definition of Supported Employment
- Mainstream job in community
- Pays at least minimum wage
- Work setting includes people who are not disabled
- Service agency provides ongoing support
- Intended for people with most severe disabilities
5Evidence-Based Principles
- Eligibility is based on consumer choice
- Supported employment is integrated with treatment
- Competitive employment is the goal
- Job search starts soon after a consumer expresses
interest in working - Follow-along supports are continuous
- Consumer preferences are important
6Eligibility Is Based on Consumer Choice
- No one is excluded who wants to participate.
- Consumers are not excluded because they are not
ready or because of prior work history,
hospitalization history, substance use, symptoms,
or other characteristics.
7Supported Employment Is Integrated with Mental
Health Treatment
- Employment specialists coordinate plans with the
treatment team, which includes case managers,
therapists, and psychiatrists.
8Do Client Characteristics Predict Success in
Supported Employment?
Valued Gateway Client Inserted slide
- Co-occurring substance use does not lead to lower
employment rates. - Consumers generally do better in supported
employment than in alternative programs
regardless of background characteristics such as
- gender, education, ethnicity, diagnosis,
hospitalization history, cognitive functioning
9Competitive Employment Is the Goal
- The agency needs to devote sufficient resources
to supported employment to permit full access to
all consumers who seek competitive employment. - Consumers interested in employment are not
steered into day treatment or sheltered work.
10Job Search Starts Soon After A Consumer Expresses
an Interest in Working
- Pre-employment assessment, training, and
counseling are kept to a minimum.
11Follow-Along Supports Are Continuous
- Supported employment staff continue to stay in
regular contact with consumer and (when
appropriate) the employer without arbitrary time
limits.
12Consumer Preferences Are Important
- Job finding is based on consumers preferences,
strengths, and work experiences, not on a pool of
jobs that are available.
13Supported Employment UnitRecommended Basic
Structure
- Minimum of 2 full-time staff
- Staff devoted exclusively to SE
- Full-time leader/supervisor who also provides
employment services - Offices physically located in mental health center
14Supported Employment Unit
- Individual caseloads, but help each other (with
job leads, etc.) - Caseloads of about 20 consumers or less
- Weekly team meetings individual supervision
15Roles of an Employment Specialist
- Problem-solver
- Team player
- Networker
- Employment specialist
- Customer-oriented
- Community-oriented
- Outcome-oriented
16Characteristics of Effective Employment
Specialists
- High energy
- Optimistic
- Likes to meet new people
- Good listener
- Knows the community
- Creative
- Projects confidence and professionalism
17Employment Coordinator Duties
- Manages referrals
- Hires and supervises employment staff
- Ensures employment specialists are learning and
using effective skills in - Engagement Assessment
- Job development Job support
18More Employment Coordinator Duties
- Role model good employment practices
- Provide supported employment information and
training to all staff - Ensure employment services are integrated with
treatment teams
19Referral
- Make referral process simple!
- Have minimal eligibility criteria
- Unemployed (or working non-competitively) and
wants competitive employment, or - Employed, but not receiving employment supports,
and wants such support - Involve multiple stakeholders
20Collaboration With Vocational Rehabilitation
Valued Gateway Client What about the
collaboration? This slide is not very informative
- VR counselor meets consumers at mental health
agency - VR counselor is part of the treatment team
- VR counselor conveys same message as rest of team
21Engagement
- Build trusting, collaborative relationship
- Assume contacts are mostly outside mental health
setting - Maintain ongoing contact
- Involve family, treatment team, and other
supporters
22Vocational Profile
- Gather comprehensive information from variety of
sources over 1-2 weeks - Consumer
- Family, friends
- Former employers
- Treatment team
23Disclosure of Psychiatric Status
- Disclosure is the consumers choice
- Nature of disclosure
- When to disclose?
- How much to disclose?
- Who to disclose to?
24A Vignette Gloria
- Gloria, I dont want my boss to know that I have
a mental illness. I will be treated
differently. - What would you, the employment specialist, say?
25Benefits Counseling
- Fear of losing benefits is major barrier to
employment - Concerns of consumers and families often
underestimated by clinicians - Rules and regulations are complicated
- Benefits counseling provides consumer-specific
information
26A Vignette Paul
- Paul, I dont know what I want to do.
Maintenance work would be okay. I will do
anything. I want to make money. - What would you, the employment specialist, say?
27Employment Plan
- Explore jobs by visiting work sites
- Develop employment plan
- Revise assessment and employment plan based on
consumers experiences
28Job Search
- Begin soon after referral
- Employer contacts within 1 month
- Preparatory work
- Resumé
- Job application
- Two forms of identification
- Practice interviewing
- Release of information
29Individualized Job Search
- Base on consumers preferences, strengths,
abilities, experiences, and deficits (e.g.,
substance use) - Seek
- Permanent competitive jobs
- Diverse jobs suiting individual consumers
- Different settings
30Ways to Find Jobs
- Identify leads primarily through networking
- Include family and treatment team
- Attend job fairs
- Use Chamber of Commerce and community
organizations (e.g., Rotary Club)
31More Ways to Find Jobs
- Newspaper (However, lots of others seeking same
job) - Internet
- Previous employers
- Tell everyone you meet
- Track contacts
- Stay persistent
32Engaging Employers
- Present confidently and professionally
- Help solve employer problem
- Recommend qualified applicant
- Respect employers time
- Identify next step Meet job candidate?
- Be dependable Do what you say you will do
33Job Support
- Individualized and time-unlimited support
- Mostly away from work site
- Include consumers support network (treatment
team, family, friends, employer, coworkers) - Negotiate accommodations with employer
34Common Job Accommodations (MacDonald-Wilson, 2002)
- Cognitive (e.g., learning job, concentrating)
- Social (e.g., interacting, reading social cues)
- Emotional (e.g., managing symptoms, tolerating
stress) - Physical (e.g., stamina)
35Job Endings
- Each job viewed as learning experience
- Job transitions are considered normal
- With a job loss, consumer and entire (SE and
treatment) team strategize for next step
36A Vignette Marguerite
- Marguerite worked for three weeks at a dry
cleaners. She was let go because of slow work
speed. - What would you, the employment specialist, say?
37Community-Based Services
- Employment specialists in community gt 50 time
- Best way to contact consumers, families,
employers - Services do not generalize well to different
settings - People reveal more about who they are outside of
the agency
38Time Management
- Focus on spending time with a few consumers
nearing employment vs. meeting everyone each week - Take phone book, cell phone, maps, newspapers,
address book if possible when job developing - Review daily/weekly schedule with supervisor
39The Dreaded Paperwork
- Comes with territory
- As much as feasible, supervisor protects staff
from busy work - Important paperwork
- Vocational profiles
- Employment plans
- Fidelity checks on
- program implementation
- Monitoring outcome
40Track Outcomes
- Track employment outcomes monthly
- Set goals 40 rate of competitive employment is
achievable - Things that you pay attention to are more likely
to be improved
41 42Track Implementation
- Use 15-item SE Fidelity Scale to measure
implementation of evidence-based practice - Staff in supported employment program can see if
they are on track - Basis for giving objective feedback
43Hartford Study Stable and high fidelity over
time after short start-up
44What About Supported Education?
- Consumer choice always a primary consideration
- Education and training expand options
- SE program should help consumers enroll in
community programs (GED classes, colleges,
technical schools)
45What About Dual Diagnosis and Work?
- Work to support sobriety
- Money as a cue
- Same SE process
46Motivation and Work
- State vs. trait
- Hopelessness as part of illness
- What has been offered?
- Program norms
- What ES and practitioners say
- What does consumer want?
- Change over time
47Problem Solving
- What does consumer want?
- Are SE principles being followed?
- Is leader ensuring staff has skills to implement
supported employment? - Have training and resource materials been
utilized?
48Summary
- Programs following evidence-based principles of
supported employment have better outcomes - Effective employment coordinators are key to good
implementation - Resource materials complement training and
supervision