| Clinical Social Work
Described
Clinical social work is a healthcare profession
based on theories and methods of prevention and treatment in providing
mental-health/healthcare services, with special focus on behavioral
and bio-psychosocial problems and disorders. Clinical social work’s
unique attributes include use of the person-in-environment perspective,
respect for the primacy of client rights, and strong therapeutic
alliance between client and practitioner. With 200,000 practitioners
serving millions of client consumers, clinical social workers constitute
the largest group of mental-health/healthcare providers in the
nation.
The knowledge base of clinical social work includes
theories of biological, psychological, and social development;
diversity and cultural competency; interpersonal relationships;
family and group dynamics; mental disorders; addictions; impacts
of illness, trauma, or injury; and the effects of the physical,
social, and cultural environment. This knowledge is inculcated
in social work graduate school and is fused with direct-practice
skills that are developed by the practitioner during a period of
at least two years of post-graduate experience under clinical supervision.
This period should suffice to prepare the clinical social worker
for autonomous practice and state-licensure as a clinical social
work professional. In the years that follow, clinical social workers
may pursue an advanced-generalist practice or may decide to specialize
in one or more areas.
Clinical social work is notable for the versatility
of its practitioners and the variety of their roles, including
that of team member and team leader in a multi-disciplinary setting.
Client consumers—individuals, couples, families, and groups—benefit
from a variety of direct services, including assessment, diagnosis,
treatment planning, intervention/treatment, evaluation of outcomes,
and case management. Clinical social work settings and services
include, but are not limited to, the following (in alphabetical
order):
| •child & family services |
• private practice offices |
| • clinics |
• public & private schools |
| • court & forensic venues |
• public sector health/mental health |
| • elder care facilities |
• rehabilitation facilities |
| • home health care |
• religious/spiritual organizations |
| • hospice |
• residential treatment |
| • hospitals |
• rural healthcare |
• not-for-profit agencies and
organizations
agencies |
• social services |
| • palliative and rehabilitative care |
• uniformed services and Veterans Affairs |
The flexible and skillful application of
knowledge, theories, and methods in a bio-psychosocial approach
is a hallmark of clinical social work. Interventions—the direct
person-to-person(s) process—are conducted with people of all
ages and range in nature from preventive, crisis, and psycho-educational
services to collaborative client advocacy and brief and long-term
counseling or psychotherapy. Typically, clinical social workers
supervise and consult with professional colleagues and may engage
in indirect practice (e.g. administration, research, teaching,
writing). It is a standard of practice for clinical social workers
to engage in career-long continuing clinical education and to
adhere to a professional code of ethics.
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