Sat.Apr 08, 2023 - Fri.Apr 14, 2023

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The Impact of Technology on Workforce Development in the United States

Famcare

Technology is transforming American and global industries at a rapid pace. According to a 2018 report, digitization and technology were expected to create over 58 million jobs by 2022. Based on the evidence, the prediction appears to be correct. Because of the quick adoption of technology in various industries, workforce development has also advanced.

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Why Do We Downplay Our Accomplishments?

My Brains Not Broken

Last year, I wrote a series of posts about challenging my instincts toward minimize the good things I do in life. Back in 2021, I wrote a few posts about challenging my instincts. I’m interested in instincts because for a long time, I overestimated their power. I thought instincts were something that could never change. I thought they were something we’d have to live with, and I would have to learn how to fight them.

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Social Work Quotes To Uplift You Now

Social Work Haven

Social work quotes are an important part of understanding the complexities of social work. They can provide insights into how we think about and approach specific problems or situations. Quotes from famous authors, educational institutions , theorists, and practitioners have been used for centuries to help articulate ideas, promote critical thinking, help with social work interventions and offer inspiration.

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Scottish services losing experienced social workers, leaving newly qualified staff without support, warns SASW

Community Care

Scottish services are losing experienced social workers, leaving newly qualified practitioners without support and putting the quality of services at risk. That was the warning from the Scottish Association of Social Work (SASW), in response to comments made last month that experienced staff were not applying for social work vacancies in the country.

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5 Must Haves for Case Management

Thousands of nonprofits rely on case management software to help collect data, manage programs, coordinate with agencies, and provide life-changing health and human services. Adopting a cloud-based case management platform is essential for nonprofits and government agencies to operate more efficiently and make better use of their funding and budget.

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NCCPR news and commentary round-up, week ending April 11, 2023

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

● “Which would be worse,” asks Jasmine Wali, director of policy & advocacy at JMAC for Families, in this story for The Nation : “being beaten by your partner, or having social services take away your children? That’s the choice facing many parents I’ve worked with as a social worker, and the answer is always the same. ‘I’d rather take the beating than catch a CPS case,’ as one said to me.

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Balancing Accomplishments with Wellness

My Brains Not Broken

Earlier this week, I investigated why people (myself included) downplay their accomplishments. There was a lot I learned from writing the post, but the most important thing was this: people don’t do things for no reason. There is something behind the way we are, even if we can’t see it or understand it. I don’t always know why I do the things I do, but that’s okay.

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Making a success of DoLS in the wake of the Liberty Protection Safeguards delay

Community Care

By Lorraine Currie The timeline provided by Community Care , from the 2014 Cheshire West judgment to the government’s postponement of the Liberty Protection Safeguards (LPS) , is incredibly helpful in reminding us of events we would otherwise forget. What I would add to that timeline is that the original impact assessment for the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) estimated that we would be dealing with around 7-8,000 referrals a year by this point in time and, at its height, the DoL

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Why “permanency” is the “creme” of child welfare (and other problems with a new "report" from Charles Murray’s favorite think tank).

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Second of two parts. Read part one here. I’ve often wondered why so many in the family policing establishment love to take the perfectly good, clear English word “permanence” and add an extra syllable, turning it into “permanency.” The dictionary says they mean the same thing, so for a long time I figured it was just a way for family policing professionals to make themselves feel more important.

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Ask Nicole: My Favorite Reproductive Justice Resources

Nicole Clark Consulting

Have a question you’d like to be featured? Let me know. I’m currently developing a presentation on reproductive justice and culturally responsive and equitable evaluation (CREE). The discussion will provide a brief overview of the Reproductive Justice framework, its connections to CREE, and recommendations for utilizing CREE when evaluating sexual and reproductive health, rights, and justice programs.

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Guest Post: Interview with Merryl Hammond, PD; Author of Mad Like Me and Navigating Bipolar Country

Bipolar Bandit

Interview with Merryl Hammond, PhD, Editor of Navigating Bipolar Country and author of Mad Like Me Q: To start, could you tell us a bit about your background and work, Merryl? A: About a hundred years ago back in South Africa where I was born, I trained as a nurse, got several post-grad nursing qualifications, did a master’s in sociology and a doctorate in adult education and public health.

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Get Connected: Using Social Media for Social Work Success

Speaker: Gary Direnfeld, MSW, RSW.

You may have the clinical skills to manage a private practice, but your success could actually hinge on marketing skills. For a thriving practice, you need to differentiate yourself from others and present yourself in a way that attracts referrals. These days, much of that happens online, including on social media. In this webinar, Gary Direnfeld will discuss how social media marketing can help you build your private practice and grow your client base.

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Government drops pledge to invest in new social work training routes

Community Care

The government has dropped a pledge to invest in new social work training routes as part of a halving of committed spending on developing the adult social care workforce. The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) revealed last week that it was reducing planned additional spending on workforce development in adults’ services from £500m from 2022-25 to £250m from 2023-25.

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Attn: Older foster youth: Meet the professor who thinks you need money more than love

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

(And she doesn’t seem very interested in your lived experience, either.) What Prof. Sarah Font is telling foster youth boils down to this: You can have a free college education – as long as you forego any chance that there will be a family cheering you on at graduation. After following issues involving foster care for decades, I’ve gotten used to the extent to which people in the system hate birth parents.

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New partnership to share research and knowledge about the global working environments of social workers

International Federation of Social Workers

The International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW) and the Social Work Workforce Research Special Interest Group (WRSIG) have agreed a new partnership to host an informal global network of people […]

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‘Yellowjackets’ Shows ECT and Harms the Mentally Ill

Nnatasha Tracy

If you're hooked on the show Yellowjackets , like me, then you'll know that in season two, episode two, Yellowjackets showed an electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) scene (I believe it may be called "electroshock" in the show). In the scene, one character, Lottie, is forced onto a bed, an injection is given in her arm, a bite block is placed in her mouth, and she is shocked by electrodes on either side of her head.

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Decision to shelve LPS ‘unacceptable blow to thousands unlawfully detained’

Community Care

The government’s decision to shelve the Liberty Protection Safeguards (LPS) is “an unacceptable blow” to the thousands of people currently unlawfully deprived of their liberty. That was the damning verdict of the country’s leading advocacy providers, VoiceAbility, after the government announced last week that it would not implement the LPS this side of the next general election, which will take place before the end of 2024.

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Managing Delirium: What Clinicians Should Know

CAPC

Part two of a two-part blog post, which covers how to manage delirium in patients with serious illness, including behavioral strategies and more.

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A New Day

Reimagining Social Work

Social workers, if we know anything, understand how systems – causes and consequences – are connected. At times of increased economic and social pressure it is those with the least who suffer the most in our system. Anecdotally I hear of rising demand for refuge from intimate partner violence and of increasingly strained resources.

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Want To Make Social Work More Accessible? Online Programs Open Up Higher Education for All

The New Social Worker

High quality online programs not only benefit students and schools, but they are also beneficial to the entire social work profession as social workers from a broader array of backgrounds emerge from their education prepared for what’s next.

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I was used as a scapegoat when Baby P died – Sunak’s attacks on social workers are dangerous | Sharon Shoesmith

The Guardian

I lost my job and was vilified in the media. Social workers must stand up against baseless accusations Sharon Shoesmith is a former director of education and children’s social care Harm to children and young people seems to be reported almost daily in the media – from the renewed interest in so-called grooming gangs, to tragic cases such as that of Logan Mwangi that horrify the entire UK for weeks at a time.

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Screening for Delirium: What Clinicians Should Know

CAPC

Part one of a two-part blog post that explores the ins-and-outs of delirium, including risk factors, screening, and more.

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7 Ways To De-Stress Your Life

MQ Mental Health

Stress is an inevitable part of life. We all experience it at some point, but the good news is that there are many ways to reduce it. So since it’s Stress Awareness Month , MQ is offering you some practical tips for reducing stress. 1) Identify the source of your stress The first step to reducing stress is to identify the source of it. Is it work-related, relationship-related, or health-related?

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Beyond 988, With Help: The Peer Specialist Role

The New Social Worker

Social workers can advance mental health practice beyond the 988 crisis line, but we don’t have to do it alone. Peer specialists can help increase safety plan completion for veterans.

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Ruthie Henshall: ‘While MPs were drinking and snogging, I was waving at Mum through a care home window’

The Guardian

Since Covid, the actor has been fighting for a legal change, determined no one should have to die alone. She discusses Partygate, rule-breaking – and getting drunk with King Charles One day in June 2020 Ruthie Henshall – actor, singer, dancer, star of musical theatre – went to visit her mother, Gloria, at her residential care home in Suffolk. This was the first time Ruthie had seen her mum for three months – not because she didn’t want to go, or through neglect, but because of lockdown.

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Caring for People We Know: An Unrecognized Risk for Burnout?

CAPC

Study exploring the challenges of caring for patients personally known to clinicians and the types of support needed, with a view to developing preliminary practice guidelines.

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Connecting to People Living With Dementia

Relias

People with dementia struggle to express their needs, thoughts, and feelings as their disease progresses. Understanding how to communicate effectively with people with dementia is vital for healthcare professionals in various settings, including home care, assisted living facilities, hospitals, and hospices. As brain function degenerates, people with dementia gradually face difficulties finding words and organizing them into logical sentences.

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Strikers Shut Down Rutgers

Beyond Advocacy

Dr. Lenna Nepomnyaschy is an associate professor at Rutgers , The State University of New York, and a participant in the current faculty strike at the university. She is a member of the board of directors of the Social Work Democracy Project. I have known Lenna since our days together in the Ph.D. program at Columbia University. I reached out to get her perspective on the strike that began on Monday.

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When Britain's care homes reward shareholders over staff, we need a new system | Amy Horton

The Guardian

Care workers kept the industry going in the Covid years on low wages at great personal cost – yet many are still struggling Our care system should be enabling people to live fulfilling lives, but each week brings new evidence that Britain’s social care system is unable to deliver this. Huge numbers of people are struggling to access support. The majority of people who deal with care services are unsatisfied with them.

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Getting Sober vs Living Sober

Living Sober

Getting sober and living sober are two very different things. One is a short(ish) term project that is hard work and requires a big concerted effort. The other is a long term lifestyle choice that requires the implementation and nurturing of a variety of nourishing tools and techniques. Getting sober requires grit, determination and bravery. It involves you identifying triggers, beating cravings, shifting […] Getting Sober vs Living Sober was first posted on April 11, 2023 at 2:39 pm. 

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Connecting to People With Dementia

Relias

People with dementia struggle to express their needs, thoughts, and feelings as their disease progresses. Understanding how to communicate effectively with people with dementia is vital for healthcare professionals in various settings, including home care, assisted living facilities, hospitals, and hospices. As brain function degenerates, people with dementia gradually face difficulties finding words and organizing them into logical sentences.

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John Tropman Writes New Book on Leading Efficient Meetings

Michigan Social Work

Professor Emeritus John Tropman’s new book, “Fixing Broken Meetings: A Manual on Meeting Rotten-osity, Deleterious Decisions, and Ineffective Implementation,” examines the myriad ways in which meetings regularly fail and how individuals and organizations can produce efficient meetings that lead to effective decision making. The book serves as a resource for courses and programs in business and organizational behavior, as well as for anyone interested in improving the functionality of meetings wi

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Council’s failures left disabled child in chronic pain for three years, watchdog finds

The Guardian

Local government ombudsman rules that delay in finding suitable accommodation for family caused serious health risks A severely disabled child missed out on vital NHS surgery and was left in chronic pain for more than three years because a council failed to move them out of unsuitable housing despite repeated pleas from health professionals, a watchdog has ruled.

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Artificial Intelligence

Famcare

With the introduction of Chatbot/GPT to the public, artificial intelligence, like every other technology introduced since the beginning of the 20th century, is making some people nervous.

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Popular Social Work Questions & Answers

Social Work Haven

It is time for that interview you have been waiting for and you must prepare. In social work interviews, there are some common social work interview questions asked. It is important that you start preparing for likely answers to questions you anticipate and not wait until the interview to decide what your answers would be. Be confident and prepare. Think through the likely questions and answers before you arrive for your interview.

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Cassandra Kelly Named 2023 NASW Student of the Year

Michigan Social Work

MSW student Cassandra Kelly has been selected as the 2023 University of Michigan National Association of Social Workers (NASW) Student of the Year. NASW selects students for this honor based on criteria that includes demonstrated leadership qualities, contribution to the positive image of a social work program, commitment to political and community activities, success in academic performance and the student’s representation of the NASW Code of Ethics.

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World Social Work Day India

International Federation of Social Workers

India Network of Professional Social Workers Associations (INPSWA) is organizing World Social Work day 2023 on 12 Apr 2023 at 7 pm (IST). Mr.