Abstract

Employment is a valued occupation that offers a sense of meaning, identity, and belonging. For people with severe and enduring mental illness, employment has also been associated with personal recovery and decreased use of mental health services. However, this population continues to be underrepresented in the labor market. Sustainable employment is often challenging for people with severe and enduring mental illness, due to a combination of personal, organizational and systemic issues. While Individual Placement and Support is an evidence-based model of employment support known to improve job attainment for people with mental illness, job retention and sustained workforce participation continue to be challenges. This narrative literature review was undertaken to address the question: “What vocational service models and approaches improve job tenure for this population?” CinAHL, Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Library were searched for the period 2005–2020, using key terms and subject headings, including “severe mental illness,” “psychiatric disabilit*,” “job tenure,” and “job retention.” Several adjunct interventions may enhance job retention, including skills training, cognitive interventions, psychological interventions, and supported education, while social firms offer a different approach focused on creating new, sustainable job opportunities. Peer support and support from family and friends also appear to be important, and emerging evidence suggests that employment specialist practices, technology, self-management, and workplace accommodations may each also influence job tenure. Service providers could make more use of these non-clinical vocational approaches to improve employment retention for people with severe and enduring mental illness.

Highlights

  • Employment is a social determinant of health and a right of citizenship, supported by The United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, Article XXIII and many national and state policies internationally [1]

  • Individual Placement and Support (IPS) does not result in employment outcomes for many participants, and the positions obtained through this approach to employment support are often unskilled, precarious, and job tenure may be relatively brief [8]

  • Social firms offer an alternative approach by creating new employment options in the open, competitive labor market, which appear to be associated with longer job tenure

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Summary

Introduction

Employment is a social determinant of health and a right of citizenship, supported by The United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, Article XXIII and many national and state policies internationally [1]. Employment is a valued social role and is considered an important part of recovery by many people with severe and enduring mental illness [3], yet this group continues to be underrepresented in the labor market [4, 5]. Individual Placement and Support (IPS) is an evidence-based model of employment support for people with severe mental illness. IPS has clearly defined principles including competitive employment, zero exclusion, rapid job placement and integration between mental health and employment supports that are measured against a fidelity scale [6]. IPS does not result in employment outcomes for many participants, and the positions obtained through this approach to employment support are often unskilled, precarious, and job tenure may be relatively brief [8]. Average tenure in jobs obtained through supported employment has been reported as 18–30 weeks [9]. Unsatisfactory job terminations have been commonly reported where a client is fired or quits without having other job plans [11, 12]

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