| Literature DB >> 34086158 |
Mariya Khoronzhevych1, Tatiana Maximova-Mentzoni2, Erika Gubrium3, Ashley Elizabeth Muller4.
Abstract
Purpose This study aimed to synthesise the available knowledge on how participant engagement in supported employment (SE) interventions is presented, defined, and conceptualised. We also aimed to develop a working definition of participant engagement in SE based on the results of our study. Methods This systematic scoping review was conducted following the PRISMA extension for scoping reviews. The following databases were systematically searched: EBSCO, SCOPUS, Social Care Online, and JSTOR. We included peer-reviewed publications in English based on empirical studies. Results Sixteen articles met the inclusion criteria and were included in the final analysis. Thematic framework analysis resulted in three themes conveying the concept of participant engagement: self-determined choice, empowerment, and collaboration/working alliance. We suggest that participant engagement in SE is an active multifaceted process that involves the empowerment of participants, participants' exercise of self-determined informed choice, and their collaboration with SE practitioners in a working alliance. Conclusions Participant empowerment, self-determined choice, and collaboration are important aspects of participant engagement in SE. The study results will appeal to SE practitioners and make significant contributions to the broader field of other vocational services supporting people in (re-)entering the competitive labour market.Entities:
Keywords: Empowerment; Engagement; Person-centred; Supported employment; Vocational rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34086158 PMCID: PMC9576634 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-021-09987-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Rehabil ISSN: 1053-0487
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Study descriptions
| Study | Country | Location | Study aim | Study methods/measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Areberg and Bejerholm [ | Not specified | effectiveness of IPS in terms of occupational engagement, work-motivation, empowerment, and quality of life among people with SMI | Randomised controlled trial, interviews | |
| Bejerholm and Björkman [ | Sweden | Five outpatient centres in Malmoe | Describe and investigate empowerment and its relationship with level of engagement | Quantitative, cross-sectional study. A 28-item Empowerment Scale, Making Decisions; Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life; Profile of Occupational Engagement Scale; Rejection Experience Scale; Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale |
| Blankertz et al. [ | USA | Two methadone treatment programs in New York City | Describe customised employment support, its principles, essential elements, and stages of service delivery | Description of the development of the intervention |
| Blankertz et al. [ | USA | Two methadone treatment programs in New York City | Evaluate customised employment support in a randomised clinical trial | Description of the development of the intervention |
| Brady, Rosenberg, and Frain [ | USA | Educational, rehabilitation, and employment settings across six geographic locations in Florida and Missouri | Present the role of the Job Observation and Behaviour Scale: Opportunity for Self-Determination scale in obtaining student and employee input into their own work performance and support needs | Quantitative, standardisation analyses of the Job Observation and Behaviour Scale: Opportunity for Self-Determination scale |
| Haslett et al. [ | USA | Two sites in Chicago | Compare a computer tablet-based engagement intervention and a printed brochure for empowering participants to self-refer and engage in individual placement and support | Quantitative, randomised controlled trial |
| Johanson, Markström, and Bejerholm [ | Sweden | Four mental healthcare services in the county of Skåne | to illustrate the IES model and process | Multiple-case design, Interviews, study of documentation and memos |
| Kilsby, Bennert, and Beyer [ | UK | Two South Wales supported employment agencies | Focus on the problems of acquiescence in supported employment | Qualitative, discourse analysis of job review interviews |
| Kilsby and Beyer [ | UK | Two South Wales supported employment agencies | Test two interventions aimed to increase self-determined vocational choices | Qualitative, direct observations and analysis of job review interviews |
| Kilsby and Beyer [ | UK | Thirteen employment sites | Compare the interaction and engagement outcomes for supported employment and adult training centre participants | Qualitative, direct observation |
| Kostick, Whitley, and Bush [ | USA | One community mental health hospital and two outpatient centres in Connecticut | Examine participant-centredness from the perspective of supported employment practitioners | Qualitative, semi-structured open-ended interviews |
| Larson et al. [ | USA | Twenty-five mental health centres across the country | Investigate individual placement and support from a practitioner’s perspective | Quantitative, open-ended survey |
| McDermott and Edwards [ | Australia | Thirty-one organisations across the country | Investigate what influences people’s decision to retire | Qualitative, in-depth qualitative interviews |
| Nittrouer, Shogren, and Pickens [ | USA | A Midwest college town | Examine the impact of interventions derived from collaboration with person-centred teams and functional assessment of workplace problems | Qualitative, single-participant multiple baseline study observations |
| Solar [ | Australia | Perth, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital | Explore considering patient views in developing a linkage intervention | Qualitative, individual interviews |
| Wehmeyer et al. [ | USA | Kansas | Examine the Girls at Work project with a focus on self-determination in vocational counselling | Intervention development description, Overview of an intervention model |
Descriptions of supported employment type and study participants
| Study | Supported employment intervention type | Target group for intervention, in author(s)’ own words | Study participants | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NN, role (intervention participants or practitioners) | Sex | Age (years) | |||
| Areberg and Bejerholm [ | IPS | Participants with severe mental illnesses (exclusively) | 120 participants in IPS, 2 in TVR | Not specified | 20–65 |
| Bejerholm and Björkman [ | Not specified | People with mental illnesses (exclusively) | 120 SE participants | Men (n = 67), women (n = 53) | Range = 21–58 |
| Blankertz et al. [ | CES | Methadone-maintained patients | NA | NA | NA |
| Blankertz et al. [ | CES | Methadone-maintained patients | NA | NA | NA |
| Brady, Rosenberg, and Frain [ | Not specified | Individuals with physical and mental disabilities | 105 SE participants | Women (n = 47), men (n = 53) | Adult employees (n = 78), range = 22–67; high school students (n = 27), range = 17–21 |
| Haslett et al. [ | IPS | People with severe mental illnesses | 45 IPS participants | NA | NA |
| Johanson, Markström, Bejerholm [ | IES | People with affective disorders on long-term sleekness leave | 5 participants, two employment specialists | Participants: 3 female, 2 male | 25–52 |
| Kilsby, Bennert, and Beyer [ | Not specified | People with mental retardation | 35 SE participants | NA | NA |
| Kilsby and Beyer [ | Not specified | Job seekers with mental retardation | 40 job seekers (5 dropped out or were not included in the final analysis) and 14 employment specialists | NA | Range = 19–52 |
| Kilsby and Beyer [ | Not specified | Individuals with learning disabilities | 51 participants: 13 in SE and 38 in an ATC | SE: nine men and four women ATC: Twenty women and eighteen men | SE, range = 28–63 ATC: NA |
| Kostick, Whitley, and Bush [ | IPS | People with severe mental illnesses | 22 employment specialists | 10 men | Mean age = 39.9 |
| Larson et al. [ | IPS | People with serious mental illnesses | 67 SE practitioners | 77% women | Mean age = 41.8 |
| McDermott and Edwards [ | Not specified | Older people with intellectual disabilities | Employees with a disability, n = 43; carers of employees, n = 2; supported employment providers, n = 12; supported employment providers (written submission), n = 14; other industry stakeholders, n = 5 (N = 76) | Employees: 60% men | Employees, range = 50–74; women < 65 |
| Nittrouer, Shogren, Pickens [ | CE | People with autism and/or intellectual disabilities | 3 customised employment participants | 1 woman, 2 men | Range = 22–29 |
| Solar [ | IPS | Patients with schizophrenia | 20 IPS participants | 12 women, 8 men | Range = 28–65 |
| Wehmeyer et al. [ | CE | Young women with intellectual and developmental disabilities | 18 customised employment participants | All women | NA |
NA not applicable, SE supported employment, CES customised employment support, IPS individual placement and support, CE customised employment, ATC adult training centre, IES individual Enabling and Support, TVR traditional vocational rehabilitation
The three themes and connections between them
| Theme | Sub-theme | Connected sub-themes |
|---|---|---|
| Expression of self-determined choice | Appropriate at different timepoints | Empowers participants from the very beginning of the intervention throughout the entire intervention Examples: [ |
| Requirement of intervention success | Empowers the participant and fosters collaboration Example: [ | |
| Consistency vs adjustability of choice | Achieved through collaboration Examples: [ | |
| Choice to stop participation | Empowered to make an uneasy but self-determined choice Examples: [ | |
| Collaboration/creating a working alliance | Provider communication | Facilitates understanding of the choices by the participant Examples: [ |
| In decision-making | Availability of choices Examples: [ | |
| Requirement for intervention success | A platform for participants to express their needs and choices and therefore, leads to better personalisation of intervention Examples: [ | |
| Role of service provider | Empowering to initiate collaborative process, providing choices Examples: [ | |
| Empowerment | Role of service provider | Enabling self-determined choice Examples: [ |
| Requirement for intervention success | Allows self-determined choice and collaboration, facilitates personalisation Examples: [ |