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- Social workers increasingly are seeking information about evidence-based practices. Numerous resources are emerging to help connect research to practice and provide information that can be helpful to practitioners.
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Social workers increasingly are seeking information about evidence-based practices. Numerous resources are emerging to help connect research to practice and provide information that can be helpful to practitioners.
May 26, 2019 · This article presents a systematic review of research regarding how best to educate social work students and practitioners concerning of the process of evidence-based practice and/or the application of empirically supported treatments (ESTs). Method:
- Florian Spensberger, Ingo Kollar, Eileen Gambrill, Christian Ghanem, Sabine Pankofer
- 2020
Jul 3, 2020 · This study has two aims: to better understand what sources of knowledge social workers use in their daily practice, and to illustrate how social workers’ use of knowledge fits an evidence-based framework.
- Joakim Finne, Ira Malmberg-Heimonen, Tor Johan Ekeland
- 2020
Jul 29, 2015 · This paper aims to provide a contemporary overview of evidence-based practice (EBP) in social work. As EBP is frequently misunderstood, we will define what EBP is as well as what it is not. In addition, we discuss some of the current challenges that social workers and the profession continue to face in integrating EBP into professional practice.
- James W. Drisko, Melissa D. Grady
- 2015
Evidence-Based Practice. Evidence-based practice in social work evolved from medicine (Sackett, Strauss, Richardson, Rosenberg, & Haynes, 2000), and has been defined by social work scholars as “a systematic process that blends current best evidence, client preferences (whenever possible), and clinical expertise, resulting in services that are ...
- Diane DePanfilis
- 2014
Nov 5, 2018 · A common definition matters given the potential of the EBP process framework to teach students to engage in critical and reflective thinking, ethical practice rooted in client empowerment, and practice decisions that have the most promise for helping the clients they serve.
Those with the skills to undertake systematic reviews will find an endless list of practice questions seeking evidence-based answers. This guidebook focuses on the critical steps of retrieving and appraising the quality of the relevant research in completing a systematic review.