NASW News


Apr 04, 2011

January 2011 Board's Action Context Finances Received the financial statements as of Dec. 31, 2010. As of Dec. 31, NASW’s total asset position was $14.6 million. In comparison to December 2009, cash increased by $683,000 and long-term investments by $1.1 million. Liabilities and deferred revenue decreased by $593,000 when compared to the same time last year. Total operating revenue exceeded...

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Apr 03, 2011

The NASW Foundation’s Social Work Disaster Assistance Fund seeks donations to give financial aid to social workers affected by the earthquake and tsunami that devastated many areas of Japan in March. The fund serves as a means to enable social workers in Japan to assist others in need, said Robert Carter Arnold, director of the NASW Foundation. “One hundred percent of the donations to this fund go directly to social workers to assist them in ongoing relief efforts there,” he said. NASW President James J. Kelly said, “In this complex and developing disaster, our Japanese professional social work colleagues are unique...

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Apr 02, 2011

Elizabeth Strand, director of veterinary social work services at the University of Tennessee’s Veterinary Medical Center, operates a help line for people who need counsel concerning their pets. An article published by Knoxville News Sentential reported that Strand is getting more calls from people who can no longer afford to keep their pets. Financial hardship or job loss may trigger a range of emotions — anger, sadness or even shame, according to the article. Strand told the newspaper that the unconditional love of a pet can boost a person’s self-esteem, but not being able to return that love by providing medical care is...

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Apr 01, 2011

From the President This month I feel it is imperative to discuss social workers practicing with aging individuals, particularly as we’ve seen the baby boom generation, which comprises 27 percent of the U.S. population, start reaching the age of 65 this year. Working with older people can be especially challenging because it raises very personal issues about one’s future. On one hand, and this is the joy, we are able to work with incredible role models, many of whom display tremendous strength and wisdom. On the other hand, we face the enormous struggles of the frail elderly who face economic, physical and emotional hardships. ...

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Mar 10, 2011

Ronald Manderscheid, left, is “noted for ... introducing consumer participation in federal workgroups and consumer assessments of the mental health care system,” said NASW Executive Director Elizabeth J. Clark, right. The NASW Foundation in December honored Ronald W. Manderscheid, recipient of its 2009 Ruth Knee/Milton Wittman Award for Outstanding Achievement in Health and Mental Health Policy, at a ceremony held in the national office. Manderscheid is executive director of the National Association of County Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities Directors and an adjunct professor at the Johns Hopkins University Bl...

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Mar 09, 2011

In an 8-0 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court in January sided with NASW in ruling [Thompson v. North American Stainless ] that Eric Thompson should be able to sue his former employer, North American Stainless, for firing him in retaliation for his then-fiancée and co-worker Miriam Relagado filing a workplace discrimination claim with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The decision reverses a lower court ruling that anti-retaliation protections afforded by Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which prohibits workplace bias, apply only to employees personally engaged in a protected activity — in this case, the ...

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Mar 08, 2011

Asua Ofosu is the new manager of government relations for NASW’s national office. Asua Ofosu, who has worked as a senior government relations associate since joining NASW in 2006, has taken the helm of the department at a pivotal point in national politics. The 112th Congress began in earnest with a Republican-controlled House of Representatives voting 245-189 to repeal the NASW-supported 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The Republican leadership has made known their desire to reduce or eliminate federal programs and funding on which social workers and their clients depend in an attempt to rein in federal spending. ...

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Mar 07, 2011

Varying Career Paths Like everyone else, I was horrified by the shooting of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and several others. A lot of media attention has been focused on the little girl who was killed, so I was glad to see the article (February News) acknowledging the life and death of Gabe Zimmerman, a social worker who was Giffords’ director of community outreach. One particular sentence in that article struck me as a nugget of buried treasure -- the quote from W. Mark Clark: “Gabe chose work in politics as his social work career path.” This, to me, is a hugely important statement and I want to call attention to it. Fa...

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Mar 06, 2011

NASW’s Stacy Collins: “For the first time ... Healthy People now includes national health goals and objectives” on dementias like Alzheimer’s disease. Social work played a role in the development of the Healthy People 2020 objectives, which were released in a final report in December. NASW submitted comments for the objectives during its drafting stages. The efforts of NASW and others in the geriatric health community resulted in a new topic area being added to the final version: “Dementias, Including Alzheimer’s Disease,” noted Stacy Collins, NASW senior practice associate. Healthy People is a...

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Mar 05, 2011

A perception persists that people who are mentally ill pose an increased threat of committing violent acts; three-quarters of Americans view the mentally ill as dangerous. Tragic events like the attempted assassination of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., by suspect Jared Loughner in Tucson, Ariz., stoke those fears. Loughner allegedly is mentally ill. But data collected by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism confirm that serious mental illness — such as schizophrenia, major depression or bipolar disorder — alone is not a significant predictor of violent behavior. (Researchers have found that people with ...

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