National Association of Social Workers/N A S W Press
Empowering Social Workers for Practice with Vulnerable Older Adults
Empowering Social Workers for Practice with Vulnerable Older Adults
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At times, social workers face challenging situations when the vulnerable older adult they are prepared to assist does not want help and refuses offered intervention and services. This can leave a social worker feeling frustrated, professionally inadequate and with great concern for the well-being of the older adult. Social workers often experience internal and external pressure to 'do something' from their own value system, the referral source, or others in the older adults' network. Feeling frustration that one will have to 'wait for the next crisis' before intervening is common.
Empowering Social Workers for Practice with Vulnerable Older Adults deals with an emerging practice in geriatric social work-the assessment of capacity-and promotes the 'person-in-environment' perspective, which is well suited to this area of practice. In addition to chapters on hoarding working with elders with Alzheimer's disease and other dementias who live alone, the book's core features include:
* Introduction to geriatric social work
* Discussion of values and ethical dilemmas
* Success factors in relationship building
* Assessment using the capacity risk model
Empowering Social Workers for Practice with Vulnerable Older Adults makes an excellent and timely graduate text, not only for specialized courses in geriatrics and gerontology, but also in core coursework to infuse content related to older adults into the social work curricula. In addition, the book will be a tremendous resource for practitioners in continuing education and certificate programs, educational initiatives for establishing core competencies in geriatric social work, and compliance training for state Adult Protective Service workers. The book is also relevant for other professionals outside of the social work profession who work with older adults, such as physicians, psychiatrists, nurses, and attorneys.
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