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A fundamental handbook to the family health model Family Health
Social Work Practice: A Knowledge and Skills Casebook is a
comprehensive guide to an emerging practice paradigm in the social
work field. Edited by pioneers of the family health approach (who
also contribute several chapters each), this book introduces the
theoretical model and skills of the practice, including a framework
for developing a family health intervention plan, illustrated by
case scenarios. Issues vital to any family health intervention are
addressed in 10 case studies that further explain the application
of the practice model. Family Health Social Work Practice stresses
a holistic orientation to assessment and intervention from a health
perspective that includes the physical, mental, emotional, social,
economic, cultural, and spiritual dimensions of family life. With
its focus on practice theories, practical information, and
evaluation strategies, the book provides a strong foundation for
skills development in the family health model. A collection of
articles from the leading practitioners and academics in the field
gives a thorough and thoughtful examination to issues ranging from
domestic violence to substance abuse to the Americans with
Disabilities Act. Family Health Social Work Practice also reviews
the philosophy behind the family health approach, summarizes its
effectiveness, and examines other critical concerns, such as: child
maltreatment mental health spiritual diversity aging agency
management One of the few casebooks to present practical
intervention plans with accompanying case scenarios, Family Health
Social Work Practice is an essential resource for students and
professionals in the social work and human services disciplines,
and an unrivaled reference for libraries. Helpful tables and
figures make the information easy to access and understand.
Discover why social work must be restructured if it is to remain
viable Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the Twenty-First Century
provides you with a critical examination of the major issues that
social work education and practice must confront if social work is
to remain as a mainline profession. The book explores issues that
are not normally covered in social work literature, such as the
challenge of reconstructing the social work profession, the use of
technology in social work, and the tension surrounding various
social work education curriculums. You will benefit from this
thorough discussion of the many problems that the social work
profession is facing: a lack of scholarly research, inadequate
educational programs, and the use of hypertechnology to educate
social work students.Social Work: Seeking Relevancy in the
Twenty-First Century examines the epistemological, theoretical,
socio/technical, and practice directions that social work has
branched into. You'll discover that today's central direction for
social work is generated from liberal, postmodern, and increasingly
feminist ideological perspectives. In a field where conceptual and
theoretical input rarely allow for intellectual diversity, this
volume demonstrates that several views are best for inquiry and
exploration in social work.Issues discussed include: examining real
or unreal social work values by separating them from beliefs,
preferences, norms, attitudes, and opinions creating social work
course outlines that incorporate practices developed around the
globe, allowing for more conceptual and theoretical growth within
the field realizing the tremendous difference between communication
in the instrumental sense via technology, and in the affective,
soul-oriented sense via personal interaction investigating the
negative effects of communicating with hypertechnology (modems,
e-mail) in the social work profession realizing the need for a
greater quantity and quality of social work research to progress
further in the fieldSocial Work: Seeking Relevancy in the
Twenty-First Century invites you to reinvent social work for
today's post-industrial and post-modern era. You will discover a
series of challenges that social work must meet and overcome if it
is to move into the new century as a relevant and viable
profession. You will explore solutions such as increasing
scholarship and research among social workers, and decreasing the
use of technology (for example, classes held via the Internet) in
social work education programs in order to increase the quality of
the social work profession.
Reason and Rationality in Health and Human Services Delivery is the
first book to discuss the topic of decisionmaking and services from
a multidisciplinary approach. It uses theory and social
considerations, not just technology, as a basis for improved
services. Health and human service students and professionals will
learn how to form rational and reasonable decisions that take their
clients'cultural backgrounds into consideration when identifying an
illness or appropriating any kind of intervention. With a
particular emphasis on theories, models, organizational settings,
technologies, and practitioner training methods that lead to
culturally sensitive decisions, Reason and Rationality will help
you deliver efficient and improved medical and social services to
clients from all ethnic backgrounds. Recognizing reason as the
centerpiece of most of Western philosophy, this text reveals how
our idea of truth, fact, and order are wrongly thought to be
universal; yet, Western principles are continually used in the
decision-making process for health and social services. Focusing on
the policy implications of decisionmaking in medical and social
service settings, this text works to incorporate a broad range of
factors into the reasoning process, such as cultural traditions and
beliefs, that will result in better treatment for patients. Giving
you suggestions and strategies for upgrading reasoning and
decision-making processes and applying them to every area of
service, Reason and Rationality discusses different themes that
will help you improve services to patients, such as: the rationale
currently used to justify decision-making strategies concerning
medical and human services using computer technology to make
clinical assessments revising administrative structure, management
theories, and organizational strategies so that decision-making
processes enhance the overall quality of service delivery how the
practitioner/patient relationship is important in choosing the
proper treatment soliciting community-based input to assess the
public s health and human service needs in order to lessen
political involvement in decision-making stages In addition, Reason
and Rationality provides information and examples that show why you
should consider the "life-world"--the values, beliefs, and
commitments of a culture s history-- as the key to understanding
the powers of reasoning that specify parameters of health and
illness.
First Published in 1993 Bibliotherapy provides literature for
mental health professionals which can be used with a clinical
approach in helping children with problems. For those not familiar
with bibliotherapy, it provides an extensive introduction to the
field including reviews of its effectiveness, value and
limitations, as well as examples of practical application. Chapters
include an overview of bibliotherapy, clinical application,
changing role models, blended family, separation and divorce, child
abuse, foster care, adoption, and childhood fears. Over 350
children's books are listed, each briefly annotated, from which the
clinician can select suitable material for therapeutic
intervention. This book is an essential read for scholars,
researchers, and practitioners of clinical psychology, psychology
in general.
Using Books in Clinical Social Work Practice: A Guide to
Bibliotherapy introduces clinical social workers and other helping
professionals to bibliotherapy, an innovative approach to helping
individuals deal with psychological, social, and developmental
problems. Literally meaning "treatment through books,"
bibliotherapy actively involves the client in the therapeutic
process through the reading of carefully selected and evaluated
books. With this guide, the therapy you give will provide
information and insight, stimulate discussion, communicate new
values and attitudes, create awareness that others have similar
problems, and provide solutions to problems. Using Books in
Clinical Social Work Practice offers a detailed approach for
helping clinicians use bibliotherapy in practice. You ll discover
which types of problems best respond to bibliotherapy and you ll
learn how to select the most effective books to treat those
problems. You ll even find the structure of the book helpful, as
it: introduces you to the basics of bibliotherapy provides a
detailed examination of the techniques for using books in treatment
reviews and analyzes the extensive research that has been conducted
on bibliotherapy focuses on the problems most effectively treated
with bibliotherapy--divorce and remarriage, dysfunctional families,
parenting, adoption and foster care, self-development, serious
illness, substance abuse offers an authoritative guide to over 300
books found to work most effectively--including summaries and
levels of interest presents conclusions and a summary for the use
of books in treatmentAlthough bibliotherapy is a well-established
practice technique in other professions, including psychiatry and
psychology, social work practitioners have not traditionally used
bibliotherapy as part of their practice. Using Books in Clinical
Social Work Practice gives today s helping professional an approach
to problem solving that you and your clients will find refreshing
and effective.
Using Books in Clinical Social Work Practice: A Guide to
Bibliotherapy introduces clinical social workers and other helping
professionals to bibliotherapy, an innovative approach to helping
individuals deal with psychological, social, and developmental
problems. Literally meaning "treatment through books,"
bibliotherapy actively involves the client in the therapeutic
process through the reading of carefully selected and evaluated
books. With this guide, the therapy you give will provide
information and insight, stimulate discussion, communicate new
values and attitudes, create awareness that others have similar
problems, and provide solutions to problems. Using Books in
Clinical Social Work Practice offers a detailed approach for
helping clinicians use bibliotherapy in practice. You ll discover
which types of problems best respond to bibliotherapy and you ll
learn how to select the most effective books to treat those
problems. You ll even find the structure of the book helpful, as
it: introduces you to the basics of bibliotherapy provides a
detailed examination of the techniques for using books in treatment
reviews and analyzes the extensive research that has been conducted
on bibliotherapy focuses on the problems most effectively treated
with bibliotherapy--divorce and remarriage, dysfunctional families,
parenting, adoption and foster care, self-development, serious
illness, substance abuse offers an authoritative guide to over 300
books found to work most effectively--including summaries and
levels of interest presents conclusions and a summary for the use
of books in treatmentAlthough bibliotherapy is a well-established
practice technique in other professions, including psychiatry and
psychology, social work practitioners have not traditionally used
bibliotherapy as part of their practice. Using Books in Clinical
Social Work Practice gives today s helping professional an approach
to problem solving that you and your clients will find refreshing
and effective.
Postmodernism, Religion, and the Future of Social Work discusses
the benefits and disadvantages of the postmodern philosophy as a
foundation for social work and human service practice. Social work
students and practitioners will learn about the developments that
have shaped postmodern thinking as they pertain to society in
general, as well as to the profession of social work. By exploring
this increasingly popular philosophy, Postmodernism, Religion, and
the Future of Social Work provides you with methods and theories
that help you evalute contemporary problems more effectively,
resulting in better services for your clients.Challenging
traditional social work practices, Postmodernism, Religion, and the
Future of Social Work examines postmodernism in terms of a world
view that is emerging along indeterminate and ambiguous lines. With
the goal of helping you provide more helpful and relevant services
to your clients, Postmodernism, Religion, and the Future of Social
Work discusses many themes related to postmodernism, including:
understanding how principles of postmodernism are characterized by
ongoing change, indeterminacy, and relativism reviewing the
historical movement of a postmodern perspective and its present
implications on social work practice supporting the strengths
perspective through a postmodernist approach discussing some
unintended and potentially negative consequences of postmodernism
that arise from uncritically adopting postmodernistic principles
analyzing the nature of social work and social welfare in Britain
and the Western World to gain insight into how social theory is
associated with postmodernity, postmodernization, and post-Fordism
exploring the postmodernistic relationship between
institutionalized religions and social services provided by
religious auspices Although postmodernism offers a new and
different way of understanding social problems and of structuring
social work practice, this text urges you to be critical in the
evaluation of its aspects and outlines some possibly negative
outcomes in certain situations. In evaluating postmodernism and its
relevance to social services and social problems, Postmodernism,
Religion, and the Future of Social Work offers theories and
research into methods that go beyond traditional practices to
assist you in providing effective and relevant services for your
clients.
Get up-to-date information on children's and parent's rights
Children have a basic human right to be free of abuse and
maltreatment. The late Dr. John Pardeck's Children's Rights: Policy
and Practice, Second Edition comprehensively explores the latest
legal, psychological, sociological, policy, and child advocacy
issues dealing with children's rights. Essential issues are clearly
discussed involving children at home, in school, in foster care,
and in residential facilities. This new edition of The Haworth
Social Work Practice Press classic examines the practical and
ethical issues inherent in balancing a child's right to
self-determination against the same child's need to be protected.
Children's Rights: Policy and Practice, Second Edition delves deep
into the causes of abuse and neglect and offers help for families
at risk. Techniques are presented for case and cause advocacy, as
well as venues for family and individual therapy. Other discussions
address the role and function of child protective services and the
juvenile justice system, a review of effective social policy to
protect and care for children, family health and children's rights
issues, and children's rights in schools and day care facilities.
This essential exploration includes extensive references and notes,
a list of Web sites, and a comprehensive glossary of influential
legal rulings focusing on children's rights. Children's Rights:
Policy and Practice, Second Edition includes over 100 pages of new
and updated material on: new rulings of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) that have implications for children's rights
legal case studies an overview and analysis of the Leave No Child
Behind Act children's rights and school violence an expanded
discussion on practice interventions focusing on various approaches
for helping children adjust to substitute care an expanded
examination on advocacy and children's rights, with emphasis on
legal case studies as a tool for enhancing the rights of children
Balancing theoretical considerations, solid information, and
practical advice, Children's Rights: Policy and Practice, Second
Edition is an essential resource for child welfare workers,
attorneys, educators, students, parents, and social workers.
A fundamental handbook to the family health model!Family Health
Social Work Practice: A Knowledge and Skills Casebook is a
comprehensive guide to an emerging practice paradigm in the social
work field. Edited by pioneers of the family health approach (who
also contribute several chapters each), this book introduces the
theoretical model and skills of the practice, including a framework
for developing a family health intervention plan, illustrated by
case scenarios. Issues vital to any family health intervention are
addressed in 10 case studies that further explain the application
of the practice model.Family Health Social Work Practice stresses a
holistic orientation to assessment and intervention from a health
perspective that includes the physical, mental, emotional, social,
economic, cultural, and spiritual dimensions of family life. With
its focus on practice theories, practical information, and
evaluation strategies, the book provides a strong foundation for
skills development in the family health model. A collection of
articles from the leading practitioners and academics in the field
gives a thorough and thoughtful examination to issues ranging from
domestic violence to substance abuse to the Americans with
Disabilities Act.Family Health Social Work Practice also reviews
the philosophy behind the family health approach, summarizes its
effectiveness, and examines other critical concerns, such as: child
maltreatment mental health spiritual diversity aging agency
managementOne of the few casebooks to present practical
intervention plans with accompanying case scenarios, Family Health
Social Work Practice is an essential resource for students and
professionals in the social work andhuman services disciplines, and
an unrivaled reference for libraries. Helpful tables and figures
make the information easy to access and understand.
Postmodernism, Religion, and the Future of Social Work discusses
the benefits and disadvantages of the postmodern philosophy as a
foundation for social work and human service practice. Social work
students and practitioners will learn about the developments that
have shaped postmodern thinking as they pertain to society in
general, as well as to the profession of social work. By exploring
this increasingly popular philosophy, Postmodernism, Religion, and
the Future of Social Work provides you with methods and theories
that help you evalute contemporary problems more effectively,
resulting in better services for your clients.Challenging
traditional social work practices, Postmodernism, Religion, and the
Future of Social Work examines postmodernism in terms of a world
view that is emerging along indeterminate and ambiguous lines. With
the goal of helping you provide more helpful and relevant services
to your clients, Postmodernism, Religion, and the Future of Social
Work discusses many themes related to postmodernism, including:
understanding how principles of postmodernism are characterized by
ongoing change, indeterminacy, and relativism reviewing the
historical movement of a postmodern perspective and its present
implications on social work practice supporting the strengths
perspective through a postmodernist approach discussing some
unintended and potentially negative consequences of postmodernism
that arise from uncritically adopting postmodernistic principles
analyzing the nature of social work and social welfare in Britain
and the Western World to gain insight into how social theory is
associated with postmodernity, postmodernization, and post-Fordism
exploring the postmodernistic relationship between
institutionalized religions and social services provided by
religious auspices Although postmodernism offers a new and
different way of understanding social problems and of structuring
social work practice, this text urges you to be critical in the
evaluation of its aspects and outlines some possibly negative
outcomes in certain situations. In evaluating postmodernism and its
relevance to social services and social problems, Postmodernism,
Religion, and the Future of Social Work offers theories and
research into methods that go beyond traditional practices to
assist you in providing effective and relevant services for your
clients.
Get up-to-date information on children's and parent's rights
Children have a basic human right to be free of abuse and
maltreatment. The late Dr. John Pardeck's Children's Rights: Policy
and Practice, Second Edition comprehensively explores the latest
legal, psychological, sociological, policy, and child advocacy
issues dealing with children's rights. Essential issues are clearly
discussed involving children at home, in school, in foster care,
and in residential facilities. This new edition of The Haworth
Social Work Practice Press classic examines the practical and
ethical issues inherent in balancing a child's right to
self-determination against the same child's need to be protected.
Children's Rights: Policy and Practice, Second Edition delves deep
into the causes of abuse and neglect and offers help for families
at risk. Techniques are presented for case and cause advocacy, as
well as venues for family and individual therapy. Other discussions
address the role and function of child protective services and the
juvenile justice system, a review of effective social policy to
protect and care for children, family health and children's rights
issues, and children's rights in schools and day care facilities.
This essential exploration includes extensive references and notes,
a list of Web sites, and a comprehensive glossary of influential
legal rulings focusing on children's rights. Children's Rights:
Policy and Practice, Second Edition includes over 100 pages of new
and updated material on: new rulings of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) that have implications for children's rights
legal case studies an overview and analysis of the Leave No Child
Behind Act children's rights and school violence an expanded
discussion on practice interventions focusing on various approaches
for helping children adjust to substitute care an expanded
examination on advocacy and children's rights, with emphasis on
legal case studies as a tool for enhancing the rights of children
Balancing theoretical considerations, solid information, and
practical advice, Children's Rights: Policy and Practice, Second
Edition is an essential resource for child welfare workers,
attorneys, educators, students, parents, and social workers.
Practical solutions for difficult clinical situations With many
chapters written by some of the field's best known contributors,
this handbook was developed for the practitioner who wants
practical and effective guidance for helping abused children. Each
major area of clinical practice is discussed by experienced
professionals, providing you with new insights and ideas regarding:
medical findings; clinical assessment; individual, group, and
family therapy; testifying in court; the role of medication in
treatment, and much more. To make the application from the written
page to your practice even more compelling, every clinical chapter
is followed by a patient vignette that demonstrates how the
principles just described can be successfully applied in the
working world of therapists. Whether abused children number only a
few or many on your caseload, this is a handbook to which you will
often refer over the years. The Handbook for the Treatment of
Abused and Neglected Children pulls together a wide range of
practical information for therapists on how to effectively work
with abused and neglected children. Unlike other volumes on the
subject, this book puts the information in context, with a 'big
picture' overview of how the therapist fits into the larger system
into which the child has been swept up--Child Protective Services,
legal proceedings, medical issues, disputes regarding custody, etc.
Inside, you'll find effective strategies for: conducting individual
therapy with abused children--how to begin therapy, identify
distortions, effectively challenge ingrained patterns of behavior,
and constructively bring therapy to a close navigating the maze of
Child Protective Services--knowing what resources are available,
what obstacles are likely to arise, and how to work with social
workers understanding the medical findings of maltreated
children--how information from a child's physician can provide
critical insights into the child's experience, and often into
children's expectations of future relationships testifying in court
as a therapist--how the court works and how to prepare to give
effective testimony facilitating parent interventions--how to help
mothers and fathers develop relationships with their children to
the fullest and nurture each child's potential as his or her
personality developsThe Handbook for the Treatment of Abused and
Neglected Children will prove valuable for students and educators
as well as novice and experienced therapists. Whether you see
children only occasionally or focus your practice on maltreated
children, this one-of-a-kind resource deserves a place in your
professional collection.
Examine issues of vital importance to you and your disabled
clientstoday and in the years to come! This groundbreaking text
provides you with up-to-date, authoritative information that will
prove to be of critical importance for disability professionals in
the coming years. It will leave you better informed about aspects
of disability that have not been well covered in the
literatureissues surrounding spirituality, civil rights, and the
medical model vs. social (or minority) model (of viewing
disability) controversy. You'll examine the impact of the Americans
with Disabilities Act in the wake of the Supreme Court's narrowing
of the Act's powers and explore newly developed theories designed
to more accurately define the true meaning of disability.
Disability Issues for Social Workers and Human Services
Professionals in the Twenty-First Century explores: the currentand
potentialroles of spirituality and religion in the rehabilitation
process the use of medication in treating disabilitywith a study
focusing on children in foster care whose emotional/behavioral
disabilities are medically (rather than psychologically) treated
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in college
studentshow it impacts them as a disability requiring academic
accommodations disability as an aspect of cultural diversitywith
suggested methods for educating the non-disabled about people with
disabilities limitations on the civil rights of those with
disabilitiesand what can be done to eliminate those limitations
computer technologies designed to aid people with disabilitieswith
an examination of a health promotion Web site for children with
disabilities and their families disability and the managed mental
health systemwith an examination of the differences in service
utilization and satisfaction in rural and urban areas how
disability can be viewed as a social construct, rather than
something that is inherent to the disabled person Keeping current
with new developments is imperative for social workers and other
professionals whose work affects people with disabilities.
Disability Issues for Social Workers and Human Services
Professionals in the Twenty-First Century provides the information
you need to stay on the cutting edge of progress in this rapidly
evolving field.
Practical solutions for difficult clinical situations With many
chapters written by some of the field's best known contributors,
this handbook was developed for the practitioner who wants
practical and effective guidance for helping abused children. Each
major area of clinical practice is discussed by experienced
professionals, providing you with new insights and ideas regarding:
medical findings; clinical assessment; individual, group, and
family therapy; testifying in court; the role of medication in
treatment, and much more. To make the application from the written
page to your practice even more compelling, every clinical chapter
is followed by a patient vignette that demonstrates how the
principles just described can be successfully applied in the
working world of therapists. Whether abused children number only a
few or many on your caseload, this is a handbook to which you will
often refer over the years. The Handbook for the Treatment of
Abused and Neglected Children pulls together a wide range of
practical information for therapists on how to effectively work
with abused and neglected children. Unlike other volumes on the
subject, this book puts the information in context, with a 'big
picture' overview of how the therapist fits into the larger system
into which the child has been swept up--Child Protective Services,
legal proceedings, medical issues, disputes regarding custody, etc.
Inside, you'll find effective strategies for: conducting individual
therapy with abused children--how to begin therapy, identify
distortions, effectively challenge ingrained patterns of behavior,
and constructively bring therapy to a close navigating the maze of
Child Protective Services--knowing what resources are available,
what obstacles are likely to arise, and how to work with social
workers understanding the medical findings of maltreated
children--how information from a child's physician can provide
critical insights into the child's experience, and often into
children's expectations of future relationships testifying in court
as a therapist--how the court works and how to prepare to give
effective testimony facilitating parent interventions--how to help
mothers and fathers develop relationships with their children to
the fullest and nurture each child's potential as his or her
personality developsThe Handbook for the Treatment of Abused and
Neglected Children will prove valuable for students and educators
as well as novice and experienced therapists. Whether you see
children only occasionally or focus your practice on maltreated
children, this one-of-a-kind resource deserves a place in your
professional collection.
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