TY - JOUR
T1 - The Why of Practice
T2 - Utilising PIE to analyse social work practice in Australian hospitals
AU - Nilsson, David
AU - Joubert, Lynette
AU - Holland, Lucy
AU - Posenelli, Sonia
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - This research used a collaborative approach to gain a comprehensive, quantitative understanding of the breadth and depth of the social work role in health care. Data was collected from individual interviews with all employed hospital social workers (N = 120) across five Melbourne, Australia health networks about their most recently completed case. This data was coded using a revised version of the Karls and Wandrei (1994) Person-in-Environment (PIE) tool to retrospectively analyze the reasons for social work involvement over the course of the case. The findings demonstrate that the hospital social work role is multidimensional across a number of domains but centers predominantly on assisting clients and their significant others with issues of altered social roles and functioning; particularly in relation to role responsibility, dependency, and managing associated role-change losses. The findings of this study will assist hospital social workers, managers, and academics to better describe and effectively undertake this complex work. These findings will also assist in the development of professional training and education to up-skill social workers who operate within this complex setting.
AB - This research used a collaborative approach to gain a comprehensive, quantitative understanding of the breadth and depth of the social work role in health care. Data was collected from individual interviews with all employed hospital social workers (N = 120) across five Melbourne, Australia health networks about their most recently completed case. This data was coded using a revised version of the Karls and Wandrei (1994) Person-in-Environment (PIE) tool to retrospectively analyze the reasons for social work involvement over the course of the case. The findings demonstrate that the hospital social work role is multidimensional across a number of domains but centers predominantly on assisting clients and their significant others with issues of altered social roles and functioning; particularly in relation to role responsibility, dependency, and managing associated role-change losses. The findings of this study will assist hospital social workers, managers, and academics to better describe and effectively undertake this complex work. These findings will also assist in the development of professional training and education to up-skill social workers who operate within this complex setting.
KW - Allied health professions and studies
UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23521389
U2 - 10.1080/00981389.2012.737901
DO - 10.1080/00981389.2012.737901
M3 - Article
C2 - 23521389
SN - 0098-1389
VL - 52
SP - 280
EP - 295
JO - Social Work in Health Care
JF - Social Work in Health Care
IS - 2-3
ER -