Written by a social worker for social workers!
This innovative book equips readers with the knowledge and skills they need to be effective case management practitioners in a variety of health and human service organizations. A must-read for students and professionals in social work, this important work introduces a unique Task-Centered Case Management Model built around the unifying principles of the profession—person-in-environment, strengths-based work, and ecological perspective. Over twenty case studies by case managers and professionals offer innovative practice insights, illustrating the practice roles and responsibilities of today′s case managers and the realities of conducting case management in today’s growing, exciting, and challenging field.
İçerik tablosu
Part 1: Trends, History, Social Work Case Management Model and Practice Competencies
Chapter 1: Current Trends Shaping Social Work Case Management
Chapter 2: The History of Social Work Case Management
Chapter 3: Task-Centered Case Management (TCCMG)
Chapter 4: Social Work Case Management
Part 2: Social Work Case Management in Selected North American and Chinese Settings: The Frontlines of Practice
Chapter 5: Social Work Case Management in an Assertive Community Treatment Program in London, Ontario, Canada by Derek Chechack and Judith M. Dunlop
Chapter 6: Case Management for Persons Living with HIV and AIDS by Karen W. Cross and John R. Barner
Chapter 7: Elder Care Services and Case Management by Stephanie Grace Prost and Rebecca C. Derrenberger
Chapter 8: The N.E. Homeless Shelter in Athens, Georgia by Melinda Williams Moore and Mary Rosser
Chapter 9: Case Management with Homeless Veterans by Brent Temple
Chapter 10: In-Patient Psychiatric Case Management with Janice Caldwell and Mark W. Flanagan
Chapter 11: La Frontera: Coordinación de los Servicios de Trabajo Social para los Menores sin Acompañante en Arizona by Rebecca A. Matthew and Anna Marie Smith
Chapter 12: Children’s Wish Foundation International in Atlanta, Georgia by Melinda Williams Moore and Elizabeth Darby
Chapter 13: Medical Case Management in a HIV/AIDS Outpatient Clinic by Y. Joon Choi and Luis R. Alvarez-Hernandez
Chapter 14: Case Management in the Treatment of Autism Spectrum Disorders in Children: A Social Work Perspective by Judy Aranson and Steve King
Chapter 15: Youth-at-Risk of Socio-Economic Exclusion, Information and Communication Technology (ICT), and Case Management Practice in Hong Kong by Chitat Chan and Stanley C. Y. Ho
Chapter 16: Case Management in Head Start Centers by Trasie A. Topple, Lynda Ritter, and La Toya R. Swanson
Chapter 17: Child Welfare (Foster Care) Services and Case Management by Kimberly Y. Huggins-Hoyt and Babette Stephens
Chapter 18: Case Management with Long-Term Care Applicants in Ontario, Canada by Deborah Ann Holosko and Derek Chechack
Chapter 19: Serious Mental Illnesses and Dual Diagnoses Case Management by Edwin Ng and Polly Li
Chapter 20: Juvenile Court Social Work Case Manager by Mark W. Flanagan, Margie J. Strauss, and Harold Briggs
Chapter 21: Medical Case Management Social Work by Junior Lloyd Allen and Andy Allen
Chapter 22: Mental Health Case Manager/Caseworker in a Community Center Setting in Kentucky by William A Hamby, Michael J. Holosko, and Leslie R. Herbert
Chapter 23: Case Management in a Senior Resource Center in North Carolina by Dana R. Dillard and M. Rene Tarquinio
Chapter 24: Social Work and Case Management: Homelessness Prevention by Lindsey Disney and Susan Bradford
Chapter 25: Child Protective Services and Case Management by Jessica Parker and Tiffany Johnson
Chapter 26: Manejadores de Casos de Salud Mental en el Sistema de Salud para Veteranos en la Región del Caribe by Yolanda Machado-Escudero and Rafael Hernandez-Ramirez
Part 3: What Did Our SWCMs Tell Us? Competencies Versus Curricula
Chapter 27: Social Work Case Management: Onward and Upward!
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Michael J. Holosko, Ph.D., M.S.W., holds an endowed chair as the Pauline M. Berger Professor of Family and Child Welfare at The University of Georgia, School of Social Work. He is also currently a Visiting Professor at City University of Hong Kong. He has taught across the undergraduate and graduate curriculum in schools of: social work (primarily), nursing, medicine, public administration, and applied social science in Canada, the United States, Hong Kong, Sweden, Australia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. For the past 38 years, he has been a consultant to a variety of large and small health and human service organizations and industry in the areas of: program evaluation, outcomes, accreditation, organizational development, communication, leadership, visioning, organizational alignment, and stress management. He has published numerous monographs, chapters, articles, and texts in the areas of: evaluation, health care, social work practice, curricula, administration, technology, gerontology, leadership, family and child welfare, social policy, research, music intervention, and spirituality. His recent text published in 2015 was Wodarski, J., Holosko, M., & Felt, M. D. (2015). Evidence-Informed Assessment and Practice in Child Welfare, Springer Publications; and in 2016 was Dunlop, J.M.., & Holosko, M. Increasing Service User Participation in Local Planning: A How-To Manual for Practitioners. He serves on the editorial boards of: Research on Social Work Practice; Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal; Social Work in Public Health; Journal of Human Behavior and Social Environment; the Hong Kong Journal of Social Work; Journal of Social Service Research and the Journal of Evidence- Based Social Work Practice. For a number of years, he has had both radio and television shows advocating for social justice in North America.