Peer Support in Mental Health Care: Is it Good Value for Money?
Trachtenberg M, Parsonage M, Shepherd G
Centre for Mental Health, London.
2013
Project ID (Internal) | 154 |
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Project Status | completed |
Full Reference (text) | Trachtenberg M, Parsonage M, Shepherd G (2013) Peer support in mental health care: is it good value for money? Centre for Mental Health. [The report can be accessed here] |
Full Reference (URL) | https://www.centreformentalhealth.org.uk/publications/peer-support-mental-health-care-it-good-value-money |
Summary / Abstract | Peer support workers – people with their own lived experience of mental illness – provide mutually supportive relationships in secondary mental health services. Increasing numbers are being employed, both in this country and elsewhere. This paper makes a first attempt at assessing whether peer support provides value for money, looking specifically at whether peer support workers can reduce psychiatric inpatient bed use. Because of the very high cost of inpatient care, the savings that result from even small changes in bed use may be sufficient to outweigh the costs of employing peer workers. |
Publication Title | Peer Support in Mental Health Care: Is it Good Value for Money? |
Author(s) | Trachtenberg M, Parsonage M, Shepherd G |
Publication Details | Centre for Mental Health, London. |
Publication Year / End of Project | 2013 |
Last Accessed | 03/01/2019 12:00 am |
NIHR School for
Social Care Research