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Survivors of trauma are disproportionately represented in agencies
providing a broad range of behavioral, social, and mental health
services. Practitioners in these settings must understand and be
able to respond to survivors of trauma in ways that are empowering,
normalize and validate their experiences and reactions, and
minimize the risk of retraumatization. Practitioners also will be
indirectly traumatized as a result of their work with trauma
survivors. Practitioners' ability to help clients with histories of
trauma depends upon clinical supervision that is trauma-informed.
The trauma-informed supervisor has the dual responsibility of
enhancing supervisees' skills as trauma-informed practitioners and
helping them manage the impact their work has on them.
Nevertheless, many clinical supervisors only have limited knowledge
and training in trauma and may not recognize either the needs of
those whom they supervise or the clients their supervisees serve.
This book compiles important recommendations from trauma-informed
practitioners, supervisors, and researchers who share their
professional reflections and personal stories based on their
hands-on experiences across mental health and medical contexts.
This book was originally published as a special issue of The
Clinical Supervisor.
Survivors of trauma are disproportionately represented in agencies
providing a broad range of behavioral, social, and mental health
services. Practitioners in these settings must understand and be
able to respond to survivors of trauma in ways that are empowering,
normalize and validate their experiences and reactions, and
minimize the risk of retraumatization. Practitioners also will be
indirectly traumatized as a result of their work with trauma
survivors. Practitioners' ability to help clients with histories of
trauma depends upon clinical supervision that is trauma-informed.
The trauma-informed supervisor has the dual responsibility of
enhancing supervisees' skills as trauma-informed practitioners and
helping them manage the impact their work has on them.
Nevertheless, many clinical supervisors only have limited knowledge
and training in trauma and may not recognize either the needs of
those whom they supervise or the clients their supervisees serve.
This book compiles important recommendations from trauma-informed
practitioners, supervisors, and researchers who share their
professional reflections and personal stories based on their
hands-on experiences across mental health and medical contexts.
This book was originally published as a special issue of The
Clinical Supervisor.
Originally published in 1980, The Life Model of Social Work
Practice was the first textbook to introduce the ecological
perspective into social work practice. This fourth edition brings
the text up to date by expanding and deepening this perspective.
Integrating contemporary theory and research findings with numerous
case illustrations drawn from a wide range of practice contexts,
this textbook provides students with an invaluable introduction to
the real world of social work practice and includes knowledge,
methods, and skills for advanced practice. The authors detail the
theoretical foundation of the ecological perspective and the life
model’s emphasis on evidence- and ethics-guided practice,
culturally competent and diversity-sensitive practice, and the
multiple sources of accountability that social workers face. The
text features an extensive discussion of the principles of
trauma-informed practice and their implications for social work
practice. Its discussion of cultural competence and sensitivity to
diversity incorporates contemporary concepts such as cultural
humility and privilege, intersectionality, and critical race theory
and presents their application to practice. The authors integrate
current research throughout the text and provide numerous research
applications to underscore and model the importance of
evidence-guided practice. The fourth edition reflects the National
Association of Social Workers Code of Ethics and the Council on
Social Work Education’s most recent set of competency standards,
which accredit social work schools and programs. It is accompanied
by a teachers guide that provides chapter summaries, recommended
teaching methods and skills, questions for discussion, and
suggested assignments and identifies where in the text the nine
EPAS competencies and their associated practice behaviors are
addressed.
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