Social Work E-News 
  Issue #143, October 11, 2012
SOCIAL WORK E-NEWS
 
REMINDER: Download The New Social Worker magazine FREE at our Web site.
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Editor's Eye
Dear Social Work Colleagues,
 
Hello! Welcome to Issue #143 of the Social Work E-News! Thank you for subscribing to receive this e-mail newsletter, which is brought to you by the publisher of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine, SocialWorker.com, SocialWorkJobBank.com, and other social work publications.
 
This will be the last e-news I send to you before election day in November! I hope you are all registered and ready to cast your ballots!
 
EXCITING NEWS…. The Fall 2012 issue of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine is available NOW! Highlights of the Fall issue include: thwarting disclosure in court (book excerpt), burnout and self-care, homeless education, workplace safety for social workers, social work grad school applications, Red Cross digital disaster volunteers, the Disaster Distress Helpline, book reviews, and more! Also included is a photo montage of social work students in action doing advocacy.
 
You can download this issue (and others) of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine in PDF format FREE at http://www.socialworker.com/home/menu/Downloads/. Please allow time for the download to complete.
 
Individual articles from this issue are also available on our Web site in Web format. Just go to http://www.socialworker.com and start reading!
 
IT'S ALSO IN PRINT! Don't forget--THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER is available in a print edition. Most individual issues from 2009 to the present are available now at http://newsocialworker.magcloud.com. You can also purchase all four issues from 2011 or 2012 in one perfect-bound volume. They are available at:
 
Our new Social Work Graduate School Site at http://www.socialworkgradschool.com features postings on applying, getting in, and navigating the social work graduate school experience. Please follow and subscribe to the site to make sure you are informed of new posts and don’t miss out on anything important!
 
Riding the Mutual Aid Bus and Other Adventures in Group Work, a book I co-edited with Jennifer Clements, is available now. This is a new volume in the “Days in the Lives of Social Workers” series—all about group work!  The book includes 44 awesome stories about group work in all kinds of settings. You can find full details about this new book at: http://shop.whitehatcommunications.com/riding-the-mutual-aid-bus-and-other-adventures-in-group-work/
 
October marks the observance of many different awareness months, weeks, and days. These include (but are not limited to): Domestic Violence Awareness Month, Down Syndrome Awareness Month, Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Bullying Prevention Month, National Down Syndrome Awareness Month, SIDS Awareness Month, Substance Abuse Prevention Month, National Spina Bifida Awareness Month, Mental Illness Awareness Week (October 7-13), National Coming Out Day (October 11), Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day (October 15), and others.
 
Coming in November: Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month, Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month, American Diabetes Month, National Homeless Youth Awareness Month, International Drum Month, and more.
 
Don’t forget—you can go to http://www.socialworker.com/home/menu/Subscribe/ and subscribe (free) to receive an e-mail reminder and table of contents of each issue of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine when it is available. If you are a subscriber to the E-News (which you are reading now!), this does NOT mean that you are automatically subscribed to THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine. They are two different publications! Subscribe to both to get the most advantage.
 
The Social Work E-News has 28,500+ subscribers, and thousands of social workers (and people interested in social work) visit our Web sites. If you like our Web sites, The New Social Worker, and the Social Work E-News, please help us spread the word by using the "Share" button on the right side of this newsletter to share the newsletter with your friends and contacts. Tell your friends, students, or colleagues to visit us at http://www.socialworker.com, where they can download a free PDF copy of the magazine, become one of our 15,000+ fans on Facebook, participate in discussions, and lots more.
 
Until next time,
Linda Grobman, ACSW, LSW
Publisher/Editor
THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER®
 
Networking:
(Be sure to click the “like” button on Facebook or “follow” on Twitter.)
LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com (search for “The New Social Worker Magazine” under Groups)
 
 
 
Featured Excerpt
What I Wish I Had Known: Burnout and Self-Care in Our Social Work Profession
by SaraKay Smullens, MSW, LCSW, CGP, CFLE, BCD
 
Editor’s Note: The following is an excerpt from an article from the Fall 2012 issue of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER. Read the full article at:
 
The training to become a social worker is arduous, demanding, and complex. My concentration was clinical social work, which during my graduate education was known as casework.  I well remember studying my basic curriculum; taking more electives than were required; receiving excellent supervision of my clinical work with individuals, couples, families, and groups; and before it was required, taking many continuing education classes.
 
Suffice it to say, I learned a great deal—but what it seemed that no one shared with me during these years, or seemed to discuss among themselves as either teachers or therapists, was the sheer exhaustion experienced in clinical work as we do our very best to meet the needs of others day after day, year after year. When one of my deeply trusted supervisors died, and I met his wife for the first time, she told me that sometimes he would return home too exhausted to even speak, and that a frequent statement she heard from a man who obviously treasured his clinical work, teaching, and writing was: “They feel better, but I surely do not.” How well I understood this feeling, I thought. How well so many in our field must understand this feeling. And yet many of us lack the attendant knowledge that can assess and direct this feeling, which is called “burnout” in the literature—or knowledge of the necessary practices to heal and soothe ourselves, which are collectively known as “self-care.” What I have learned over the years is the necessity of addressing this complicated exhaustion before the feeling of depletion leads to dysfunction and beyond. With this in mind, I share the precise information that I wish I had known about “burnout” and “self care” in the early years of my work, with references for your further study.

The Problem of Burnout

“Burnout” as a term was first applied by Freudenberger (1975) to describe what happens when a practitioner becomes increasingly “inoperative.” According to Freudenberger, this progressive state of inoperability can take many different forms, from simple rigidity, in which “the person becomes ‘closed’ to any input,” to an increased resignation, irritability, and quickness to anger. As burnout worsens, however, its effects turn more serious. An individual may become paranoid or self-medicate with legal or illegal substances. Eventually, a social worker afflicted with burnout may leave a promising career that he or she has worked very hard to attain or be removed from a position by a forced resignation or firing.

In the intervening 37 years, burnout has been the focus of several studies, each of which has affirmed the phenomenon (van der Vennet, 2002). We may instinctively realize that therapeutic work is “grueling and demanding” with “moderate depression, mild anxiety, emotional exhaustion, and disrupted relationships” as some of its frequent, yet common, effects (Norcross, 2000). We may even have gotten used to some of the factors promoting burnout such as “inadequate supervision and mentorship, glamorized expectations...and acute performance anxiety” (Skovholt, Grier, & Hanson, 2001). Yet, as social workers, we may still not pay full attention to the reality of burnout until suddenly everything seems overwhelming. At such times, we may lack the knowledge of what is transpiring or the critical faculties to assess our experience objectively that would enable us to take proper measures to restore balance to our lives.

To explore and understand the phenomenon of burnout before it is too late, researchers have found it useful to introduce several components of the term or attendant syndromes, specifically compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, and secondary traumatic stress. Although there is a great deal of overlap among these terms, each of them poses a particular risk and originates from a different place in the practitioner’s experience or psychology.
 
Read the rest of this article at:
 
Articles from the Fall 2012 issue of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER include:
 
• Student Role Model: Christine Webb (in PDF and print version only)  
 
 
• Field Placement: What I Wish I Had Known: Burnout and Self-Care in Our Social Work Profession - http://www.socialworker.com/home/Feature_Articles/Field_Placement/What_I_Wish_I_Had_Known%3A_Burnout_and_Self-Care_in_Our_Social_Work_Profession/  
 
 
 
 
• Being Who We Are, Every Day, Everywhere (in PDF and print version only)  
 
 
• International: ABCD in Practice: A Practical Lesson From the Field Placement (in PDF and print version only)  
 
• Tech Topics: Red Cross Digital Disaster Volunteers Offer Support Through Social Media/Sidebar: Disaster Distress Helpline - http://www.socialworker.com/home/Feature_Articles/Technology/Red_Cross_Digital_Disaster_Volunteers_Offer_Support_Through_Social_Media/  
 
 
• Slide Show: Social Work Students in Action—Advocacy! - http://www.flickr.com/photos/newsocialworker/sets/72157631686039144/show/  
 
• Reviews  
 
…and more!
Words From Our Sponsors
NEW BOOK! Riding the Mutual Aid Bus and Other Adventures in Group Work: A “Days in the Lives of Social Workers” Collection, edited by Linda May Grobman and Jennifer Clements. Groups come in all kinds. Therapy groups. Support groups. Task groups. Psychoeducational groups. Online groups. Play groups. Experiential groups. Art groups. Drumming groups. Co-facilitated groups. Child groups. Adult groups. Family groups. The list goes on. Regardless of what setting you are in, if you are a social worker, you will work with groups at some time in your career. Read 44 stories of social work with groups. Available now at: http://shop.whitehatcommunications.com/riding-the-mutual-aid-bus-and-other-adventures-in-group-work/
 
Are you or someone you know applying to social work graduate school? The Social Work Graduate School Applicant’s Handbook is now available in Kindle format and print format! Order it from Amazon here for the Kindle edition or here for the print edition.
 
Check out all of our social work and nonprofit books, social work greeting cards, social work buttons, and more. All of our books and products are available through our secure online store at: http://shop.whitehatcommunications.com
 
You can also download our catalog in PDF format at:
 
Job Corner
Find jobs for new grads and experienced social work practitioners at http://www.socialworkjobbank.com, THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER’s online job board and career center. Post your confidential résumé at http://jobs.socialworkjobbank.com/c/resumes/resumes.cfm?site_id=122
 
If you or your agency are hiring social workers, don’t forget to post your jobs on SocialWorkJobBank.com. Please check the SocialWorkJobBank “products/pricing” page at http://jobs.socialworkjobbank.com/r/jobs/post/index.cfm?site_id=122 for job posting options and SPECIAL offers.  Our audience of professional social workers is active and engaged in the job search, receiving more than 480,000 e-mail job alerts last year and actively applying to open positions. Your jobs will gain additional exposure to our social networks on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.  Also, please note that SocialWorkJobBank.com is part of the Nonprofit Job Board Network. You can post your job to SocialWorkJobBank and get exposure on other network sites for a reasonable additional fee.
 
Job seeker services are FREE—including searching current job openings, posting your confidential résumé/profile, and receiving e-mail job alerts. Please let employers know that you saw their listings in the SOCIAL WORK E-NEWS and at SocialWorkJobBank.com.
 
There are 1,057 jobs currently posted on SocialWorkJobBank.com. Check it out today.
 
Features
 
RAISING AWARENESS
 
Below you will find some representative links about various issues that are being highlighted this month. There are many other great resources that can be found via Google, Twitter, Facebook, and other online sources.
 
Domestic Violence Awareness Month
 
National Resource Center on Domestic Violence             
 
National Bullying Prevention Month
PACER’s National Bullying Prevention Center
 
 
National Spina Bifida Awareness Month
 
Spina Bifida Association
 
 
Breast Cancer Awareness Month
 
National Breast Cancer Foundation
 
 
Mental Illness Awareness Week
 
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
 
 
National Coming Out Day
 
Human Rights Campaign
News & Resources
 
Write for THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER
 
I am seeking articles for upcoming issues of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine. I am especially interested in articles in the following categories:
 
·         field placement
·         practice specialties
·         news of innovative social work practice
·         technology
·         what every new social worker needs to know about…
·         other topics of interest to social work students, new graduates, and seasoned professionals
 
Our style is conversational and educational, and articles typically run 1,500-2,000 words for feature articles (considerably shorter for news items).
 
I also welcome submissions of poetry, photographs, illustrations, artwork, and other creative work depicting social work and related topics.
 
Please contact Linda Grobman, editor/publisher of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER, at: lindagrobman@socialworker.com
 
 
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SAMHSA Announces New Behavioral Health Resource About U.S. War Veterans

Since 2001, more than 2.2 million U.S. veterans have served in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom) and Iraq (Operation Iraqi Freedom). SAMHSA’s “Behavioral Health Issues Among Afghanistan and Iraq U.S. War Veterans,” In Brief, Volume 7, Issue 1 introduces some of the behavioral health issues facing these veterans, including substance abuse, posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, and suicide. This In Brief also discusses screening tools and intervention.
 
The In Brief is a bulletin that provides nontreatment providers, including professionals from the primary care, criminal justice, and social work fields, with information on the prevention and treatment of behavioral health issues.
 
The In Brief is available for free download at http://store.samhsa.gov or through the link below:
 
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Presidential Candidate Debate Schedule
 
There are three remaining debates before the U.S. elections this November. They are:

Thursday, October 11: Vice Presidential Debate (TONIGHT)
Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. ET
Centre College, Danville, KY
Focus: Foreign and domestic topics

Tuesday, October 16: Presidential Debate (Town Hall)
Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. ET
Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY
Focus: Foreign and domestic issues

Monday, October 22: Presidential Debate
Time: 9:00-10:30 p.m. ET
Lynn University, Boca Raton, FL
Focus: Foreign policy
 
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National Academies of Practice Seeks Nominations

The National Academies of Practice is seeking nominations (including self-nominations) for membership. The Social Work Academy is one of the original constituent groups within the NAP.

For more information about the NAP and the nomination process, see:
https://netforum.avectra.com/eWeb/StartPage.aspx?Site=NAP2
 
 
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Social Work-Related News Headlines
 
Here are several recent stories that may be of interest to social workers:
 
1)    Sandusky Victim: I Trust No One: http://myfox8.com/2012/10/10/sandusky-victim-i-trust-no-one/  
 
 
3)    Social Workers Outraged by EastEnders Storyline:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/greenslade/2012/oct/09/eastenders-social-care
 
On Our Web Site
Fall 2012 ISSUE OF THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER IS NOW AVAILABLE!
 
The Fall 2012 issue of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER is available now! It is available to download in PDF format at:
 
 
THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER’s Web site at http://www.socialworker.com includes the full text of many articles from past issues of the magazine. The current issue is featured on the site’s main page. Past issues can be found under “Magazine Issues” in the right column of the page. For selected full-text articles from issues prior to Spring 2006, click on “Feature Articles Archive” on the left side of the page. The magazine is also available for FREE download in PDF format.
 
Individual articles from the Fall 2012 issue now online include:
 
 
• Student Role Model: Christine Webb (in PDF and print version only)  
 
 
• Field Placement: What I Wish I Had Known: Burnout and Self-Care in Our Social Work Profession - http://www.socialworker.com/home/Feature_Articles/Field_Placement/What_I_Wish_I_Had_Known%3A_Burnout_and_Self-Care_in_Our_Social_Work_Profession/  
 
 
 
 
• Being Who We Are, Every Day, Everywhere (in PDF and print version only)  
 
 
• International: ABCD in Practice: A Practical Lesson From the Field Placement (in PDF and print version only)  
 
• Tech Topics: Red Cross Digital Disaster Volunteers Offer Support Through Social Media/Sidebar: Disaster Distress Helpline - http://www.socialworker.com/home/Feature_Articles/Technology/Red_Cross_Digital_Disaster_Volunteers_Offer_Support_Through_Social_Media/  
 
 
• Slide Show: Social Work Students in Action—Advocacy! - http://www.flickr.com/photos/newsocialworker/sets/72157631686039144/show/  
 
• Reviews  
 
…and more!
 
 
In addition to the free PDF and Web versions of the magazine, the magazine is available in PRINT at http://newsocialworker.magcloud.com! Order it today!
 
You can also purchase bound volumes for 2011 and 2012 at Amazon.com. Search for “The New Social Worker” (in quotes).
 
Our online discussion forum/message board is a place for open discussion of a variety of social work-related issues. Join in our discussion at http://www.socialworker.com (click on the “Forum” link).
 
 
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JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK VALUES AND ETHICS SPRING ISSUE AVAILABLE
 
The Journal of Social Work Values and Ethics is a free, online, peer-reviewed journal published by the publisher of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER. It is published twice a year, in full text, online at: http://www.socialworker.com/jswve
 
The Fall 2012 edition is coming soon!
 
The Spring 2012 edition is available online now at:
 
Go to the journal Web site at http://www.socialworker.com/jswve to read this and other available issues. You can also sign up for a free subscription, and you will be notified by e-mail when each issue is available online.
 
Get continuing education credit for reading selected articles from the Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics. Several new courses are now available. See http://www.socialworker.com/jswve/content/view/57/52/ for details.
 
In Print
White Hat Communications, publisher of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER magazine and the Social Work E-News, has published several books about social work. These books make great gifts (for graduation or other occasions) for yourself, or for your friends, students, and colleagues in social work!
 
Briefly, those currently in print are:
 
DAYS IN THE LIVES OF SOCIAL WORKERS: 58 Professionals Tell Real-Life Stories From Social Work Practice (4th Edition), edited by Linda May Grobman
 
MORE DAYS IN THE LIVES OF SOCIAL WORKERS:35 Real-Life Stories of Advocacy, Outreach, and Other Intriguing Roles in Social Work Practice, edited by Linda May Grobman
 
DAYS IN THE LIVES OF GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIAL WORKERS: 44 Professionals Tell Stories From Real-Life Social Work Practice With Older Adults, edited by Linda May Grobman and Dara Bergel Bourassa.
 
RIDING THE MUTUAL AID BUS AND OTHER ADVENTURES IN GROUP WORK: A “DAYS IN THE LIVES OF SOCIAL WORKERS” COLLECTION, edited by Linda May Grobman and Jennifer Clements
 
IS IT ETHICAL? 101 SCENARIOS IN EVERYDAY SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE: A DISCUSSION WORKBOOK, by Thomas Horn
 
THE FIELD PLACEMENT SURVIVAL GUIDE: What You Need to Know to Get the Most From Your Social Work Practicum, 2nd Edition, edited by Linda May Grobman
 
THE SOCIAL WORK GRADUATE SCHOOL APPLICANT’S HANDBOOK: The Complete Guide to Selecting and Applying to MSW Programs, by Jesus Reyes
 
We also publish books on nonprofit management. Want to start your own agency? Check out THE NONPROFIT HANDBOOK: Everything You Need to Know to Start and Run Your Nonprofit Organization (6th Edition) and IMPROVING QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE IN YOUR NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION, by Gary M. Grobman.
 
HOW TO ORDER
 
All of our books are available through our secure online store at:
 
You can also download our catalog in PDF format at:
 
VISIT OUR SITES

www.socialworker.com
 
 

IN THIS ISSUE
Featured Excerpt
Words from Our Sponsors
Job Corner/Current Job Openings
Features
News & Resources
On Our Web Site
In Print
Newsletter Necessities
NEWSLETTER NECESSITIES
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ABOUT THIS NEWSLETTER
 
THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER® SOCIAL WORK E-NEWS is published by:
White Hat Communications (publisher of THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER® magazine and THE NEW SOCIAL WORKER® ONLINE)
P.O. Box 5390
Harrisburg, PA 17110-0390
Linda Grobman, Editor
linda.grobman@paonline.com
http://www.socialworker.com
 
 
Advertising: To place a job listing, sponsor this newsletter, or place a banner ad on our Web site, e-mail linda.grobman@paonline.com for rates and further information.
 
News: Please send brief social work-related news items to linda.grobman@paonline.com for consideration.
 
 
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Copyright 2012 White Hat Communications. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to forward this entire newsletter, with all information intact, by e-mail to social work colleagues, students, and others interested in social work, for personal use only. You may also print out this newsletter for personal use. All other uses of this material require permission from the publisher at: linda.grobman@paonline.com
 
White Hat Communications, P.O. Box 5390, Harrisburg, PA 17110-0390 http://www.whitehatcommunications.com