HURTing: An Analysis of Service User and Carer Referrals to a UK Social Work Regulator

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK British Journal of Social Work Pub Date : 2023-09-21 DOI:10.1093/bjsw/bcad211
Davy Hayes
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Abstract

Abstract In the context of increasing regulation of social workers internationally, this study examines allegations made to a UK social work regulator, the Northern Ireland Social Care Council (NISCC), by service users and carers. A retrospective review of 134 records relating to such allegations during the ten-year period 2006–2015 was undertaken, representing just over one-third (36.4 per cent) of all allegations received. Allegations were made primarily about family and child-care social workers (91.0 per cent) and reflected the four inter-linking categories of concerns about the honesty of social workers, reports that service users/carers were treated unequally, allegations that social workers failed to demonstrate respect in their interactions with service users/carers, and concerns about technical aspects of social workers’ practice. The nature of these allegations forms the acronym HURT that describes both the experiences of service users/carers and the stressful context in which social workers practice. This article concludes that addressing the stress and HURT of both parties is important and makes suggestions regarding how the findings can strengthen the role of the regulator, influence social work practice and empower service users and carers.
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伤害:对英国社会工作监管机构的服务用户和护理人员转介的分析
摘要:在国际社会工作者监管日益加强的背景下,本研究考察了服务用户和护理人员向英国社会工作监管机构北爱尔兰社会关怀委员会(NISCC)提出的指控。对2006-2015年十年间与此类指控有关的134份记录进行了回顾性审查,占收到的所有指控的三分之一多一点(36.4%)。指控主要是关于家庭和儿童保育社会工作者的(91.0%),反映了对社会工作者诚实的四个相互关联的类别的关注,关于服务使用者/照顾者受到不平等对待的报告,关于社会工作者在与服务使用者/照顾者的互动中未能表现出尊重的指控,以及对社会工作者实践技术方面的关注。这些指控的性质构成了首字母缩略词HURT,它既描述了服务使用者/照顾者的经历,也描述了社会工作者在工作中所处的压力环境。本文的结论是,解决双方的压力和伤害是重要的,并就如何加强监管机构的作用、影响社会工作实践和赋予服务使用者和照顾者权力提出了建议。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
22.20%
发文量
208
期刊介绍: Published for the British Association of Social Workers, this is the leading academic social work journal in the UK. It covers every aspect of social work, with papers reporting research, discussing practice, and examining principles and theories. It is read by social work educators, researchers, practitioners and managers who wish to keep up to date with theoretical and empirical developments in the field.
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