Jump to content

User:Peterson.moll/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Disaster social work is the practice of social work in natural disaster situations. This is a field that specializes in strengthening communities both as a whole and as individuals in the wake of a natural disaster. This particular kind of social work includes working with the most vulnerable members of the community while strengthening local communities to help with the recovery process.

Targets of Social Work[edit]

According to the American Red Cross, “Across the duration of a disaster, four stages have been identified that provide chronological targets for social work responses:

(1) preimpact, beginning when a disaster poses no immediate threat but prompts mitigation and preparedness activities

(2) impact, or the period when the disaster event takes place,

(3) postimpact, or the period immediately after the impact up to the beginning of recovery

(4) recovery, or the period in which disaster survivors are working toward restoration of their predisaster state.”[1]

Volunteers attend a community emergency drill in Marquette, MI.

These four stages are the main targets social workers want to hit when dealing with a natural disaster. These targets aim to help with the recovery process.

Natural Disaster[edit]

For a disaster to classify as natural it must be caused by a force of nature and result in great damage or loss of life. Examples of a natural disaster would be floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunami, avalanches, and tornados. Elaborate a little more here.

Practice[edit]

In the context of disasters, social work should be a process that includes helping the emotionally and physically wounded while strengthening local communities. It is important to focus on development issues in addition to the disaster. Community organizers should be supportive facilitators helping the community members return as much as possible back to their lives before the trauma. Along with psychological help social workers aim to help the public return restructure their homes. Rather than taking over the process their objective is to help the community accomplish these goals on their own with the guidance of social work. The idea being that the community members should be the ones to restore their lives in order to heal psychologically and come to terms with the disaster that has occurred. Social workers must also have knowledge of the systems and institutions in the community in order to work within and against the systems as necessary.

In addition to these community organizing skills, social workers should incorporate clinical and research skills. These skills should include the ability to assess emergent community needs, so that they can quickly assess the public health needs of individual community members immediately following a disaster and make a plan accordingly. These kinds of assessments help social workers plan and organize their responses. [2]

Social workers also need to formulate their approaches in a way that increases the self-determination of disaster survivors. Because disaster survivors are in a vulnerable position, it is important for social workers to ensure the survivors can maintain agency over their lives and not become disempowered by the expertise of the social worker. [3]

Being prepared for disasters is another important role for social workers to play. They are there to help lessen the harmful effects of disasters. All communities should be prepared for a disaster because no communities are immune to crisis. Social workers can help communities be prepared by emphasizing community collaboration and coordination of social networks to make a comprehensive plan before a disaster strikes. [4]

Community Outreach[edit]

Community outreach is neglected in the thoughts of disaster recovery. It is an underestimated tool that can be crucial to the recovery process for both the individuals harmed and the community itself.

Ethical considerations[edit]

Across the board the policies and national governmental bodies responsible for disaster management have been regarded as “unclear, poorly explained, too rigid, and required a high level of middle-class financial management skills to comply with eligibility requirements.”

An emergency system in need of significant improvement risks the vital emergency needs in a community. Examining this topic through a lens of social work and community organizing, any areas in need of improvement translates to a delay in emergency services at the most critical time of need.

Even the best efforts and intentions of organizations may still pose ethical questions if the processes and services do not adequately translate to the desired outcome of adequately responding to survivors’ needs under disaster conditions.[5]

Ethically, social work professionals are held to the standards of the NASW Code of Ethics.[6] This code outlines that a social worker has an ethical responsibility to serve the broader society, “Social workers should provide appropriate professional services in public emergencies to the greatest extent possible.”[7]

There is great difficulty working under emergency or disaster conditions, which highlights the need to continually work to expand and explore ways the system needs improving. [8]

Qualifications[edit]

Social workers are trained to provide services, navigate social systems, create necessary programs, and connect at-risk individuals with resources. They must work with all people regardless of their demographic characteristics and be committed to serving the most vulnerable members of communities. Social workers' skills in navigating complex systems of care for their clients makes the social work profession uniquely qualified to work with communities. After disasters to help ensure the health of the community and individuals within it is when their skills are the most useful. Please refer to the links below for more information on how to become qualified to respond to disasters. [9]


[10]

[11]

[12]

  1. ^ "Disasters". National Association of Social Workers. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  2. ^ Pyles, L. (2008). "Community organizing for post-disaster social development: Locating social work". International Social Work. 50 (30): 321–333. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  3. ^ Soliman, H.H.; Rogge, M.E. "Ethical considerations in disaster services: a social work perspective". Electronic Journal of Social Work. 1 (1): 1–23.
  4. ^ Mathbor, G.M. (2007). "Enhancement of community preparedness for national disasters: The role of social work in building social capital for sustainable disaster relief and management". International Social Work: 357–369. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  5. ^ Soliman, H.H.; Rogge, M.E. (2002). "Ethical considerations in disaster services: A social work perspective". Electronic Journal of Social Work. 1 (1): 1–23.
  6. ^ "NASW Code of Ethics". National Association of Social Workers.
  7. ^ "6.04 Public Emergencies section". NASW Code of Ethics. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  8. ^ Soliman, H.H.; Rogge, M.E. (2002). "Ethical considerations in disaster services: A social work perspective". Electronic Journal of Social Work. 1 (1): 1–23. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  9. ^ Zarkour, MJ; Harrell, EB (2004). "Access to disaster services: Social work interventions for vulnerable populations". Journal of Social Science Research. 30 (2): 27–52. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  10. ^ Fred Bemak & Rita Chi-Ying Chung (2011) Post-Disaster Social Justice Group Work and Group Supervision, The Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 36:1, 3-21, DOI: 10.1080/01933922.2010.537737
  11. ^ Allison Rowlands (2013) Social Work Training Curriculum in Disaster Management, Journal of Social Work in Disability & Rehabilitation, 12:1-2, 130-144, DOI: 10.1080/1536710X.2013.784602
  12. ^ Lena Dominelli (2015) The opportunities and challenges of social work interventions in disaster situations, International Social Work, Vol. 58(5) 659-672, DOI: 10.1177/0020872815598353