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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The recent establishment of evidence-based practice (EBP)
interventions in the mental health space has enabled social workers
to diagnose various mental, emotional, and behavioral issues in
clients. This increased focus on using scientific methods to
develop EBPs has been helpful for professionals making choices
about client intervention, but it tends to distract attention from
the client-facing process of delivering a given intervention. The
effectiveness of direct social work practice always requires one's
competence in providing a variety of intervention modalities, but
the outcomes are also dependent on the social worker's ability to
develop and maintain constructive relationships with clients. The
Dynamics of the Social Worker-Client Relationship is an in-depth
contemporary approach to the many ways in which social workers can
develop, maintain, and rebuild constructive working relationships
with clients who display various psychological symptoms. Building
on 14 years of practitioner experience and 25 years teaching
clinical social work practice, Joseph Walsh provides helpful ways
to cultivate positive relationships and promote better
opportunities for successful intervention. Each chapter focuses on
a particular challenge that social workers may encounter in that
process, including the benefits and limitations of theory
selection, boundaries, the use of self, the working alliance,
relationship ruptures, special issues presented by children and
adolescents, terminations and transfers, clients about whom a
social worker experiences highly positive or negative feelings,
appropriate usage of physical touch and humor, working with
psychotic clients, and various uses of technology. The book is
filled with case studies from a wide range of field placements.
Walsh analyzes these in each instance and walks readers through
each predicament to ensure effective relationships are always at
top of mind.
This up-to-date primer on psychopharmacology and psychosocial
interventions serves as a useful resource as you expand your daily
roles in psychiatric medication management. Presenting material
within a contemporary framework of "partnership" practice that is
rich with case examples, the authors offer facts, myths, and
relevant information about psychotropic medication in an
easy-to-access manner. Content on a variety of topics, including
coverage of children and adolescents, helps you become more
responsive to the medication-related concerns of mental health
clients--and work more collaboratively on these issues with
families and other mental health care providers. Data from the
authors' national survey of randomly selected NASW members provides
information that enables you to be aware and active with respect to
clients' medication-related dilemmas, but also mindful of the
sociopolitical context of prescription practice in psychiatry.
The concept of recovery in mental health represents the radical
shift from the reductive ideas of disease and cure to a holistic
understanding of the individual. It is an investment in the
personal journey toward wellness that involves developing hope,
supportive relationships, self-motivation, social inclusion, and a
greater sense of life's purpose. The principles behind the recovery
movement mirror the NASW core values for the social work
profession: emphasizing service and social justice through the
empowerment and full engagement of the consumer in defining his or
her strengths, needs, and goals. The Recovery Philosophy and Direct
Social Work Practice explores the potential of the social work
profession to use these core values to help persons with mental
illness work toward recovery. The book addresses the ways social
workers can implement and support recovery activities through a
consideration of recovery philosophy, the utilization of a social
work perspective on recovery, and in-depth examples of recovery
practice with individuals who have schizophrenia, depression,
bipolar disorder, and autism spectrum. This book is a practical
guide for direct practitioners. It emphasizes the cooperative
dynamic of the social worker/consumer relationship and addresses
the difficult topic of endings in recovery practice. The models
presented in this book will enable social workers to expand their
existing intervention skills to work more collaboratively with
consumers toward their goals of holistic recovery from mental
illness.
Learn essential clinical assessment skills for working in the
mental health field using a case-based approach Mental Health in
Social Work: A Casebook on Diagnosis and Strengths-Based Assessment
emphasizes gaining competency in the DSM-5 diagnoses of mental
disorders that are commonly seen in clinical and social service
settings. Using a case-based approach, students and professionals
learn to understand clients holistically as they proceed with the
assessment and intervention process. The 3rd Edition includes new
chapters on obsessive-compulsive disorder (Ch. 9), post-traumatic
stress disorder (Ch.10), and gender dysphoria (Ch. 14) It also
includes additional content on socially diverse populations
throughout the text, and new "Questions to Consider" for making a
DSM diagnosis are included with each case study.
Effective endings ensure that intervention gains continue after the
therapeutic relationship ends. Joseph Walsh relates this critical
topic to all practitioners through his use of diverse settings,
detailed coverage of clinical endings, and extensive case
illustrations that make the content concrete, practical, and
accessible. Walsh takes a multi-setting and multi-theoretical
approach to the often-overlooked topic of endings in clinical
practice. Endings in Clinical Practice is organized into three
parts. The first part covers types of endings in clinical practice,
both planned and unplanned; the importance of closure; and common
endings tasks across fields of practice. Part Two outlines
theoretical perspectives on endings especially pertinent to
advanced practitioners. The final section considers a variety of
specific clinical ending situations and the ways in which clients
and practitioners may react to them.
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