Search results
Individualized, integrated, intentional, structured, SMART, and sustained
- Social workers are required to engage in ethical and competent practice in pursuit of individual, family, group, and community well-being. To achieve that aim, these individuals must engage in self-care that IS individualized, integrated, intentional, structured, SMART, and sustained.
www.socialworktoday.com/archive/exc_020420.shtml
People also ask
Is self-care an ethical necessity in social work?
Why is professional self-care important in social work?
What makes a social worker ethical?
What are the ethical principles of social work?
Is intentional self-care important in social work?
What should social workers do when dealing with ethical concerns?
With this revision to the Code of Ethics, self-care has formally entered the conversation as an ethical necessity in social work practice. Given the exposure to multiple forms of trauma they face daily, social workers experience high rates of burnout and stress.
- Self-Care ‘IS’ an Ethical Imperative for Social Workers
In the contemporary context of social work practice,...
- Self-Care ‘IS’ an Ethical Imperative for Social Workers
Social workers actively seek out supervision, consultation or mentoring. Social workers are knowledgeable about the impact and risk factors related to burnout, compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and the importance of self-care. Guidelines: Social workers strengthen their practice and well-being by: 4.2.1.
In the contemporary context of social work practice, self-care is not optional; it is imperative. Yet—despite the promise of self-care in allaying problematic employment circumstances—mistakes, misnomers, and misconceptions about self-care persist.
Professional self-care is paramount for competent and ethical social work practice. Professional demands, challenging workplace climates, and exposure to trauma warrant that social workers maintain personal and professional health, safety, and integrity.
Aug 19, 2021 · To be effective social work professionals, and effective humans, we need to heal, help each other heal, and intentionally create just and healing contexts. Self-care is an essential part of that healing, and NASW recently emphasized this importance in its revised Code of Ethics ( NASW, 2021).
- Anna Scheyett
- 2021
The goal of self-care is to not only decrease anxiety but also create meaning and self-exploration. This chapter begins by exploring the relationship between ethics and self-care. It examines the theoretical rationale for self-care, utilizing the Wounded.
May 3, 2018 · Self-care may not only be crucial in preventing secondary traumatic stress, burnout, and high staff turnover, but it can serve as a means of empowerment that enables practitioners to proactively and intentionally negotiate their overall health, well-being, and resilience.