Solution-based Casework: An Introduction to Clinical and Case Management Skills in Casework Practice

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Routledge, Aug 13, 2020 - Social Science - 244 pages

Solution-based casework is an approach to assessment, case planning, and case management that combines what we know from clinical social work with what we value about sound social work practice. It is grounded in family-centered social work and draws from clinical approaches within social work and mental health. By integrating problem- and solution-focused approaches that form the clinical and social work traditions, treatment partnerships are more easily formed between family, caseworker, and service provider.

Solution-Based Casework is a skill-based, practice-oriented text that provides the specific guidance that students and new practitioners need in order to make sense quickly of the complex tasks of assessment and case planning in child welfare. The book flows out of a long practice experience, and was developed in consultation with workers and supervisors who were attempting to remedy problems viewed as contributing to recurrent abuse and neglect.

It seeks to end adversarial relationships in casework and advocates case plans based on specific outcome skills rather than on those written with vague outcome goals measuring attendance in counseling. It serves as a common conceptual framework for integrating disparate segments of a response network, thereby allowing all providers in a therapeutic system to work toward common goals.

The text is divided into three sections. In Section I the conceptual history and theoretical foundations of solution-based casework are presented so that the reader can place this approach to casework within the ongoing professional conversation about what constitutes sound practice. Section II addresses issues of assessment and case planning. Section III focuses on case management issues and how treatment team members experience a solution-based casework approach.

 

Contents

Introduction
Searching for Solutions in the Postmodern World
Anchoring Casework in Everyday Life Events
Assessing Problem Detail
Building a Consensus for a Prevention Plan
The Process of Writing Objectives and Tasks
SolutionBased Case Management
Making the Transition from Casework
Supervisors Role in Case Management
Treatment Providers Role in Case Management
SolutionBased Interviewing Techniques
How Staff Experience Change
Challenges Inherent in Changing Habits
References
Index
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About the author (2020)

Dana N. Christensen is professor and director of the Center for Family Resource Development, Kent School of Social Work, University of Louisville. Jeffrey To dahl is assistant professor, with a specialization in Marriage and Family Therapy, College of Education, University of Oregon. William C. Barrett is in private practice, Family Intervention of Kentucky, Frankfort, Kentucky.

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