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Journal Article: Associate Professor of Social Work Sara Bressi

April 6, 2017



Authors:
Bressi, SK; Vaden, ER

Source:
CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK JOURNAL, 45 (1):33-38; 10.1007/s10615-016-0575-4 MAR 2017

Abstract: In light of diminishing resources in service settings, and the subsequent high risk for worker burnout, self care remains an important vehicle for promoting worker well-being. However, traditional definitions of self care are based in formulations about the nature of the self that don't reflect paradigmatic shifts in social work practice that place increased emphasis on the multiplicity of workers' selves, use of self and a collaborative frame for the worker-client relationship. Thus, a reconsidered definition of self care is proposed that reflects intersubjective, relational, and recovery-oriented frames for practice and posits strategies for self care that make the self appear.