NASW News


Entries for 2011

Aug 14, 2011

Improving delivery of psychosocial services for nursing home residents was the focus of the “Psychosocial Care in Nursing Homes” conference in Washington. The event was funded by The Commonwealth Fund and supported by NASW, LeadingAge (formerly the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging) and the American Health Care Association. Greater attention is being given to psychosocial care of nursing home residents in response to the Minimum Data Set 3.0, the latest tool issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to implement standardized assessment and facilitate care in nursing homes and non-critical...

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Jul 18, 2011

Social worker Gwendolyn Adam is the new training branch chief for the Maternal and Child Health Bureau’s Division of Research, Training and Education of the Health Resources and Services Administration. She said one of her first projects is to update the national strategic plan for MCH training. With this goal, she invited NASW to a March workshop called “Diversity Across the Disciplines” to gain an understanding of the way social workers have promoted diversity in the workforce. “As a training branch, we are looking at what other partners are doing to affect diversity in their organizations so we can update our st...

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Jul 17, 2011

Mit Joyner, president of the Council on Social Work Education, participated in the symposium. Social work leaders, government representatives, interdisciplinary collaborators, health care consultants, educators and representatives of foundations and front-line service providers convened at NASW to identify ways to support policies that will build the social work workforce across fields of practice. Participant Marilyn Flynn said the meeting was critical since the entire health care workforce is facing ever increasing challenges. “The future strength of the profession depends on our leadership in defining roles, responsibilities and...

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Jul 16, 2011

The board of directors of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare, or AASWSW, recently announced 11 new inductees. Richard Barth, president of the AASWSW board and professor and dean of the School of Social Work at the University of Maryland, said the new inductees raise the academy’s membership to 40. “In this exceptional entering class — the first to have undergone the strict selection procedures created by the Academy Board and Nominations Committee last year — are scholars with experience leading more than 200 research studies with local, state or federal funding from scores of government agencies ...

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Jul 15, 2011

Four graduate students from the College of Social Work at The Ohio State University and NASW Ohio Chapter Associate Director Danielle Smith attended a meeting with President Barack Obama and his senior staff at the White House in June. The students were invited because of their organizing “The Student Cafe: Conversations for Change” in Columbus. It was among the top 10 youth roundtables selected from 381 across the U.S. The other members of the group were Colleen Dempsey, Emily Panzeri, Donna Ruch and Sarah Tarrant. Tarrant was selected to join representatives from the other nine selectees to personally meet with the president, p...

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Jul 13, 2011

Social workers make up the majority of mental health providers in the U.S. Americans, regardless of age, deserve quality mental health care services, said U.S. Rep. Edolphus “Ed” Towns, D-N.Y. In an effort to support that pledge, Towns and the newly formed Congressional Social Work Caucus hosted a Capitol Hill briefing in May: “Prevention, Treatment and Services Research Funding in the National Institute of Mental Health Budget.” “The mental well-being of our residents in our country is important to me and to social workers,” Towns said at the briefing. “We must invest in social work to serve the ...

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Jul 12, 2011

NASW has developed a new practice perspective guide, “The Medical Home Model: What Is It and How Do Social Workers Fit In?” Written by Stacy Collins, NASW senior practice associate, the document explains the history of the medical home concept and its recent rise in popularity. Early evidence suggests that this model has the potential to improve client care — while also reducing health care expenditures — by minimizing emergency room visits and hospitalizations, improving adherence to treatment plans and other cost-saving measures, the document explains. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality describes a me...

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Jul 11, 2011

An Ignored Path In reading “Chronic Conditions Document Reflects NASW Input” (May News) and the full text of the framework, I was dismayed to not see diet as one avenue of “prevention and treatment strategies for improved health outcomes.” There is much recent research on plant-based diets being effective to this end. To reduce health disparities, NASW should advocate on clients’ behalf to help them make dietary choices that can reverse or ease many chronic conditions, rather than relying on medications that do not heal the body. According to recent research, a well-planned plant-based diet can reverse type II ...

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Jul 10, 2011

A lesbian who was denied the right to seek custody of her ex-partner’s adopted daughter should be allowed to do so, NASW said in a May 3 brief to the New Mexico Supreme Court. Research shows that nonbiological parents can forge strong relationships with children and such relationships are valuable for children’s development, regardless of the parent’s sexual orientation, NASW said. “Decades of social science research have shown that children experience psychological harm and trauma when attachment bonds they have formed with their functional parents are severed,” NASW said in an amicus brief filed in the case o...

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Jul 09, 2011

Joel Nana of the African Men for Health and Sexual Rights, Samuel Matsikure of Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe, Ugandan activist Paul Semugoma and Evelyn Tomaszewski of NASW took part in a May Capitol Hill briefing for International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia. While social and political acceptance of the LGBT community have made great strides in the U.S. and some other countries, members of this group continue to face substantial discrimination elsewhere. Dr. Paul Semugoma, a physician and HIV and LGBT activist in Uganda, said addressing homophobia in his country is vital to promoting successful HIV prevention efforts. The U.S...

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