280 Pages
by
Routledge
280 Pages
by
Routledge
280 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This is Volume V of seven in a collection on the Sociology of Mental Health. Originally published in 1964, the object of this book is to study a particular group of social workers, those trained as psychiatric social workers. It was begun in the belief that their work should not be 'left to the imagination' and that an accurate factual picture of their training, practice, professional activities, research and writing would inform and clarify. It has been designed to answer certain questions: who are psychiatric social workers? What do they do? Are they 'half-baked' or adequately trained? How has psychiatric social work been moulded?
Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 The Origins and Development of Training for Psychiatric Social Work; Chapter 3 Who are Psychiatric Social Workers?; Chapter 4 The Careers of Psychiatric Social Workers; Chapter 5 The Work of the Psychiatric Social Worker—The Child Guidance Clinic; Chapter 6 The Work of the Psychiatric Social Worker—Mental Hospital and Community Care; Chapter 7 The Psychiatric Social Worker’s Contribution to the Writings and Research of Social Work; Chapter 8 The Professional Association—Definitions and Protection of Function; Chapter 9 The Professional Association–Training; Chapter 10 The Professional Association—Public Influence and Professional Welfare; Chapter 11 Conclusions;
Biography
Noel Timms