Social work practice outcomes: Making a measurable difference
Authors: Pritchard, C. and Williams, R.
Pages: 166-185
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-6563-7.ch009
Abstract:The key issue in all human services is outcome. The authors report on a series of four mixed methods research studies to conclude that good social work can bring about positive measurable differences to inform policy and practice. The first focuses on how effective Western nations have been in reducing Child Abuse Related Deaths (CARD); the second explores a three-year controlled study of a school-based social work service to reduce truancy, delinquency, and school exclusion; the third examines outcomes of "Looked After Children" (LAC); the forth re-evaluates a decade of child homicide assailants to provide evidence of the importance of the child protection-psychiatric interface in benefiting mentally ill parents and improving the psychosocial development and protection of their children. These studies show that social work has a measurable beneficial impact upon the lives of those who had been served and that social work can be cost-effective, that is, self-funding, over time.
Source: Scopus
Social Work Practice Outcomes: Making a Measurable Difference
Authors: Williams, R. and Pritchard, C.
Editors: Pack, M. and Cargill, J.
Pages: 166-185
Publisher: IGI Global
ISBN: 9781466665637
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-6563-7
Abstract:The key issue in all human services is outcome. The authors report on a series of four mixed methods research studies to conclude that good social work can bring about positive measurable differences to inform policy and practice. The first focuses on how effective Western nations have been in reducing Child Abuse Related Deaths (CARD); the second explores a three-year controlled study of a school-based social work service to reduce truancy, delinquency, and school exclusion; the third examines outcomes of “Looked After Children” (LAC); the forth re-evaluates a decade of child homicide assailants to provide evidence of the importance of the child protection-psychiatric interface in benefiting mentally ill parents and improving the psychosocial development and protection of their children. These studies show that social work has a measurable beneficial impact upon the lives of those who had been served and that social work can be cost-effective, that is, self-funding, over time.
http://www.igi-global.com/book/evidence-discovery-assessment-social-work/110005
Source: Manual
Preferred by: Richard Williams