AASW – Social Work People Podcast AASW
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- Society & Culture
Social workers play a significant role collectively and individually dedicating themselves to achieving social justice, promoting inclusion and improving the wellbeing of individuals, families, groups and the most vulnerable members of our communities. AASW – Social Work People explores the diverse world of social work and connects listeners to the people driving change and providing advocacy on the issues that impact upon the quality of life of all Australians.
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Health through the widest lens, Part 2: Kim Hobbs and award winning teamwork
Last month we brought you a repeat of our earlier conversation with Rosalie Pockett AM. Just as we were planning to re-broadcast the follow up episode with her research partner, Kim Hobbs, Kim was named Allied Health professional of 2023 by Western Sydney, LHD. When you listen to this conversation with her, you’ll understand why. Congratulations Kim!
Kim’s award:
https://thepulse.org.au/2023/11/23/since-1994-social-worker-kim-hobbs-has-been-dedicated-to-westmead-hospitals-gyaecological-cancer-patients-and-their-families/
Special Issue Australian Social Work Social Work and Cancer.Editorial by Rosalie Pockett and Kim Hobbs Free Access. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0312407X.2021.1988664?src=
AASW Members: Australian Social Work Special Issue Social Work and Cancer Volume 75, Issue 2, 2022.https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rasw20/current
Prof Irwin Epstein on Clinical Data Mining: https://www.routledge.com/Clinical-Data-Mining-in-Practice-Based-Research-Social-Work-in-Hospital/Epstein-Blumenfield/p/book/9780789017093
Acknowledgement of Traditional Owners
The Australian Association of Social Workers respectfully acknowledges the past and present traditional owners and ongoing custodians of the lands on which this podcast is being recorded. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present, their ancestors and their families, and to the Elders of other communities who may be listening.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. -
Social Workers Improving Healthcare: Part 1 Rosalie Pockett AM and Health Inequity
encore-social-workers-improving-healthcare-part-1
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The Social Worker in the Library
For many people who see a social worker, it is because they are already involved in our health or community services system, and they are referred by another professional. This means they have to make contact with our formal service system, and this is something that doesn’t suit everyone. What if it was possible to walk into a public place like a library, and see a social worker? Even if you didn’t live in that local area? Who would fund a program like that? Is there a sufficient level of need for a library social worker? What difference does it make to the community? Erin McKeegan has the answers.
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: https://news.melbourne.vic.gov.au/libraries-offer-a-safe-haven-for-melburnians-in-need/
Launch housing https://www.launchhousing.org.au/
City of Melbourne’s initiatives to prevent and end homelessness: https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/community/homes-melbourne/ending-homelessness/Pages/ending-homelessness.aspx
Review of the trial project: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01616846.2020.1825917
FURTHER READING
An international perspective: https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/01/03/1063985757/why-your-local-library-might-be-hiring-a-social-worker#:~:text=Art%20%26%20Design-,When%20the%20answers%20are%20not%20in%20books%2C%20some%20libraries%20hire,finding%20mental%20health%20and%20more.
For a contrast to this inclusive approach, see this example of a policing and security-based approach:
In the Library with the Lead Pipe: https://apo.org.au/node/271231
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Out of the 'Too Hard Basket'
When young people walk through Alex Wilson’s door, they are already carrying the stigma from their long involvement in our mental health system. They know they have been called ‘Frequent Flyers’ or ‘treatment resistant’. Alex’s aim for her work with these young people is that they will feel appreciated, validated and empowered. Alex knows that this work involves risks. But Alex is not cavalier about these risks. Her rigorous approach to risk is where the conversation starts.
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/conditionsandtreatments/cognitive-behaviour-therapy
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy: https://www.sane.org/information-and-resources/facts-and-guides/dialectical-behaviour-therapy-dbt
Continuing Professional Development available from the AASW
CBT: https://my.aasw.asn.au/s/event-information?EventID=a2Y9g0000002KEBEA2
DBT: https://my.aasw.asn.au/s/event-information?EventID=a2Y9g0000002KEaEAM
Related articles from Australian Social Work:
YOUNG PEOPLE DESCRIBE WHAT THEY WANT FROM THEIR WORKERS:
Zuchowski I, Braidwood L, d’Emden C, Gair S, The Voices of ‘At-Risk Young People About Services They Received: A systematic literature review, Australian Social Work, vol 75 (1) 2022, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0312407X.2020.1776742
ASSESSING RISK IN YOUNG PEOPLE:
Lemon G, Stanford S, Sawyer AM Trust and the Dilemmas of Suicide Risk Assessment in Non-government Mental Health Services, Australian Social Work, vol 69 (2) 2016, 145-157 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0312407X.2015.1131843
DBT AND SOCIAL WORK
Cooper B, & Parsons J. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy: A social work intervention?. Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 21(4), 83–93. https://doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol21iss4id264
Acknowledgement of Traditional Owners
The Australian Association of Social Workers respectfully acknowledges the past and present Traditional Owners and ongoing Custodians of the land on which this podcast is being recorded. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present, their ancestors and their families, and to the Elders of other communities who may be listening
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. -
ENCORE Leaving Matilda: From Elite Sport to Social Work
Back in 2021, we talked to Ellen Beaumont about her experiences representing Australia as one of the Young Matildas, and her life afterwards. Back then we had just learned that Australia would be hosting the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Now that we know how well the Matildas have played in that tournament, we are bringing you this replay of that conversation as a bonus episode.
When Ellen Beaumont was in the Young Matildas, she trained every minute that she wasn’t working, eating or sleeping. She put her education and career on hold, she missed family events and had no social life. All the while she knew that if she’d been a man she would have been well paid and sponsored, whereas Ellen was paid nothing to work this hard and represent her country. But for Ellen this was a life of privilege.
So when her sporting career had come to its end, how did Ellen make the transition out of this privilege? How did she end up in social work? And which aspects of her former life help her now as a social worker?
SHOWNOTES:
“Young Matildas Selected” SBS: ‘The World Game”, 30/04/2014
Wikipedia summary of 2004 FIFA U-19 Women’s World Championship
Crawford F, and McGowan L, Never Say Die: The Hundred Year Overnight Success of Australian Women’s Football, New South Press, 2019
Beaumont E, Chester P, and Rideout H, ‘Navigating Ethical Challenges in Social Media: Social Work Student and Practitioner Perspectives’, Australian Social Work, Vol 70, 2017
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/0312407X.2016.1274416?journalCode=rasw20&
‘You Can’t Ask That: Ex footballers, ABC iview 05/05/2021
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The AASW respectfully acknowledges the past and present traditional owners and on-going custodians of the lands on which this podcast was recorded. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present, their ancestors and families, and to the Elders of other communities who may be listening.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. -
Ethical decisions at the end of life
Jane Sullivan OAM’s career has spanned paid and unpaid work, community services and the health system, social work and psychology, church organisations and the public sector. As she looks back over her career, it is her conversations with one group of people that stay with her. These were the people who wanted to make the decision that no-one wants to have to make.
Jane Sullivan’s OAM Citation
https://www.gg.gov.au/sites/default/files/2023-01/20230126%20-%20Media%20notes%20-%20OAM%20%28S-Z%29.pdf
Jane’s resource for parents of children with life limiting conditions:
Caring decisions: A Handbook for parents facing end-of-life decisions for their child,
The Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne
https://www.rch.org.au/uploadedFiles/Main/Content/caringdecisions/130890%20Caring%20Decisions%20book_v1.pdf
Articles:
After an end-of-life decision: Parents’ reflections on living with an end-of-life decision for their child
Jane E Sullivan Lynn H Gillam, Paul T Monagle
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health / Vol 56, Issue 7, pp 1060-1065
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jpc.14816
Ethics at the end of life: who should make decisions about treatment limitation for young children with life threatening or life limiting conditions?
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health / Vol 57, Issue 9, pp 594-598
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1440-1754.2011.02177.x
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.