Supervising Peer SupportBook 2 in The LEAP Framework(TM) Series
Peer support changes lives.
But inside clinical systems, it can slowly disappear.
Not all at once.
Not with a policy change.
Not because anyone meant to erase it.
It happens quietly.
A peer is praised for "handling crises independently."
Documentation starts sounding more clinical.
Supervision conversations shift toward treatment outcomes.
Burnout creeps in.
And suddenly, the role built on lived experience starts looking like entry-level clinical work - without the license, protection, or authority.
This book is about stopping that drift before it becomes damage.
Supervising Peer Support is for anyone who cares about protecting the integrity of peer roles - supervisors, peers, clinicians, program managers, behavioral health leaders, and advocates who know something precious is at stake.
Because peer support isn't a stepping stone to clinical work.
And it isn't informal emotional labor.
It is its own form of authority.
Inside this book, you'll discover:
- Why supervision is not just mentorship - it's governance
- How language alone can reshape a peer's role
- The subtle ways documentation erodes identity
- Why peer burnout is often a systems problem, not a resilience issue
- How crisis handling quietly expands liability
- What healthy collaboration between clinicians and peers actually looks like
Most organizations believe they value lived experience.
Few have built the structure to protect it.
The LEAP Framework(TM) offers something different: a practical, repeatable architecture that keeps peer support distinct, ethical, and sustainable inside regulated clinical environments.
You won't find vague culture talk here.
You'll find:
- Clear distinctions between clinical authority and peer authority
- Real-world case studies
- Supervision scripts that prevent role drift
- Burnout tracking tools that catch overload early
- Escalation models that protect everyone involved
- A step-by-step roadmap for strengthening systems without destabilizing teams
Whether you are a peer who feels the pressure to "do more than your role,"
a supervisor trying to protect boundaries without creating rigidity,
or a leader concerned about liability, burnout, and integrity - this book will give you language and structure to name what's happening and fix it.
Peer integrity should never depend on strong personalities.
It should depend on strong systems.
If you believe lived experience deserves protection - not absorption - this book will show you how to build that protection into the structure itself.
Because peer support doesn't drift when governance is clear.
And when governance is clear, everyone - peers, clinicians, and clients - thrives.