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Mental Health Support Worker

Provide day-to-day support to people living with mental health conditions, helping them manage their wellbeing, access services, and work towards recovery.

Canonical page: /careers/mental-health-support-worker
Physical demand

Low

People contact

Very high

Time to entry

1–6 months — most employers hire with GCSE-level education and train on the job

What you do

Mental health support workers provide practical and emotional support to people with conditions ranging from anxiety and depression to psychosis and personality disorders. You might work on an inpatient ward, in a community mental health team, in supported housing, or in a specialist service. Day-to-day tasks include running structured activities, supporting medication routines, escorting service users to appointments, managing risk in collaboration with clinical staff, writing support plans, and providing consistent human contact and encouragement. The role requires resilience, empathy, and the ability to stay calm during distressing situations.

Why this career is resilient

Mental health services are a stated NHS and government priority, with significant planned investment in community mental health teams and crisis services. The human therapeutic relationship — consistency, trust, attunement — is the foundation of mental health recovery and cannot be automated. Demand substantially exceeds workforce supply in most UK regions.


Routes in

Employer-funded training

Some employers — particularly the NHS, emergency services, and larger care providers — run their own funded training programmes. You apply for a job and train as you work.

Duration: Varies

Apprenticeship

Earn while you learn: work with an employer and study part-time, leading to a nationally recognised qualification. Typically funded by the government and your employer.

Duration: 1–4 years depending on trade

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