Stakeholder-driven approach to developing a peer-mentoring intervention for young adults with intellectual/developmental disabilities and co-occurring mental health conditions.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Young adults with intellectual/developmental disabilities and co-occurring mental health conditions (IDD-MH) experience significant mental health disparities. Barriers to services include transportation and stigma associated with services. Peer mentoring (PM) may be one solution to these barriers. METHODS: We conducted exploratory research to develop a PM intervention for young adults with IDD-MH by partnering with 3 young adults with IDD-MH and a seven-member advisory board. In addition, we conducted focus groups with mental health clinicians (n = 10), peer providers (n = 9), and transition specialists (n = 20) to identify the desired PM outcomes and features and content that may facilitate these outcomes. RESULTS: Prioritized outcome: identifying and utilizing leisure activities as coping strategies. PM features: mentors should use relationship- and outcome-driven actions to operationalize a mentee-centred approach. Features and content considerations: safety, mentor matching, degree of structure, mentor training and support, and collaboration with mentees' support teams. DISCUSSION: Findings are aligned with previous research on PM.
  • Authors

  • Schwartz, Ariel
  • Young Adult Mental Health/Peer Mentoring Research Team
  • Kramer, Jessica M
  • Rogers, E Sally
  • McDonald, Katherine E
  • Cohn, Ellen S
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • September 2020
  • Keywords

  • Child
  • Developmental Disabilities
  • Humans
  • Intellectual Disability
  • Mental Health
  • Mentoring
  • Mentors
  • Young Adult
  • developmental disability
  • inclusive research
  • intellectual disability
  • mental health
  • participatory research
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 32119173
  • Start Page

  • 992
  • End Page

  • 1004
  • Volume

  • 33
  • Issue

  • 5