The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust

Peer-based recovery support services are evidence-based practices used to achieve long-term recovery. Fundamental to these services are peer recovery workers, who use their lived experience of long-term recovery to form trusting, supportive relationships with individuals initiating self-directed jou...

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Main Author: Kenneth D. Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Critical Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/09581596.2024.2332796
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author Kenneth D. Smith
author_facet Kenneth D. Smith
author_sort Kenneth D. Smith
collection DOAJ
description Peer-based recovery support services are evidence-based practices used to achieve long-term recovery. Fundamental to these services are peer recovery workers, who use their lived experience of long-term recovery to form trusting, supportive relationships with individuals initiating self-directed journeys to mental health or substance use recovery. However, peer recovery workers report low salaries and workplace environments that cause unnecessary stress, burnout, compassion fatigue, and suboptimal service provision. We compare mean state peer recovery worker wages with prevailing state living wages by utilizing a living wage calculator and assembling data on wage offers from a national job-posting platform in the US. Our results suggest significant wage insufficiency. Among single-worker households with children, the living wage exceeds mean peer wages in every state. We conclude with guidance to public health researchers and practitioners to address the social justice implications of wage insufficiency.
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spelling doaj-art-b7d9c61cfa83413a9ca768eddae2f01f2024-12-17T07:39:38ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCritical Public Health0958-15961469-36822024-12-0134111210.1080/09581596.2024.2332796The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjustKenneth D. Smith0Department of Public Health, University of Tennessee Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, USAPeer-based recovery support services are evidence-based practices used to achieve long-term recovery. Fundamental to these services are peer recovery workers, who use their lived experience of long-term recovery to form trusting, supportive relationships with individuals initiating self-directed journeys to mental health or substance use recovery. However, peer recovery workers report low salaries and workplace environments that cause unnecessary stress, burnout, compassion fatigue, and suboptimal service provision. We compare mean state peer recovery worker wages with prevailing state living wages by utilizing a living wage calculator and assembling data on wage offers from a national job-posting platform in the US. Our results suggest significant wage insufficiency. Among single-worker households with children, the living wage exceeds mean peer wages in every state. We conclude with guidance to public health researchers and practitioners to address the social justice implications of wage insufficiency.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/09581596.2024.2332796Substance usemental healthpeer recoveryworkforcejust wages
spellingShingle Kenneth D. Smith
The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
Critical Public Health
Substance use
mental health
peer recovery
workforce
just wages
title The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
title_full The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
title_fullStr The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
title_full_unstemmed The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
title_short The wages of peer recovery workers: underpaid, undervalued, and unjust
title_sort wages of peer recovery workers underpaid undervalued and unjust
topic Substance use
mental health
peer recovery
workforce
just wages
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/09581596.2024.2332796
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