Pulling mental health social workers out of NHS trusts risks “losing professional knowledge” and denting social support for service users
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Pulling social workers from NHS threatens professional development
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Pulling mental health social workers out of NHS trusts risks “losing professional knowledge” and denting social support for service users
Read the original post:
Pulling social workers from NHS threatens professional development
Cuts to councils and the NHS mean the training necessary to ensure social workers can effectively apply the deprivation of liberty safeguards will be unaffordable for the foreseeable future, says the Mental Health Alliance.
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Deprivation of liberty safeguards training ‘unaffordable’
Nine hundred adult social care staff, including social workers, will be transferred to the NHS to create the biggest integrated health and social care provider in the UK, it was confirmed today. (Image: Rex Features).
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900 adult care staff join NHS in biggest integration deal yet
NHS talking therapy services are achieving high rates of recovery for mental health service users but access to treatment remains too low, sector leaders say. Their warning follows the first assessment of the flagship Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme.
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Poor access takes shine off talking therapy recovery rates
Social work is much more than just visiting people in their homes for a chat and a cup of tea. Often, as a social worker, you will have to deal with difficult and unpleasant situations; removing a child from the family home, dealing with a drunk client or having to call in the police to deal with someone that you have spent months building up a relationship with. These are all hard decisions to make, which is why all social workers have to take an honours degree in the subject before they can commence work.
Clients and Organisations
Often social work can be something of a juggling act, between the needs of your clients, the ordinary people, and the demands of organisations like the NHS, schools or even the police. As a social worker, it is part of your job to ensure that channels of communication are opened between your client and the authorities, so that the best possible outcome for them and their family can be assured. Good people skills are essential in social work, as is patience and the willingness to listen to other people’s points of view, no matter how much you may disagree.
Day as a Social Worker
As a social worker, your principal role is to speak to your client and the authorities who are dealing with them to work out a care plan that will hopefully improve their lives now and in the future. These care plans can sometimes be very simple – such as having a difficult child diagnosed with ADHD – but sometimes they can be very difficult and emotional decisions to make; removing children from the family home, for example, when one or other of the parents is abusing or neglecting them. If you choose a career in social work you will have several cases ongoing at the same time, some that only need minor attention and some that will take up a lot of your time, including calls out-of-hours. Part of the skill of being a social worker is managing this workload so that you can give the correct amount of attention to each case, and not let one get lost.
Two Social Work Roles
There are two distinct types of social work; one dealing with adults and the other dealing with young people. Within these two groups there are hundreds of different situations and problems that you might have to deal with, but most social workers choose to either work with adult clients or young people. It is then possible to specialise within those groups as your career progresses, so you might choose to work with the elderly or with young offenders, depending on your skills and experience. Before you start a career in social work, it might be best to think about these two groups and decide which one, adults or young people, you would prefer to specialise in.
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