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How social work can contribute in the shift to personalised, recovery-oriented psycho-social disability support services

journal contribution
posted on 2015-11-01, 00:00 authored by L Brophy, A Bruxner, Erin WilsonErin Wilson, N Cocks, M Stylianou
This paper presents the findings from an Australian study in which forty-one people, who self-identified as having a psycho-social disability as a result of mental health problems, spoke about their priorities for treatment, care and support within a personalised funding context. The research enabled an improved understanding of the choices about support that people with psycho-social disabilities would make if offered individualised funding packages. Participants prioritised specific supports to improve their health, financial situation, social connection, housing and personal relationships. A relationship with a support worker with a range of skills was identified as a key facilitator of these life goals, but people with psycho-social disabilities also valued opportunities to have discretionary funds to directly address the major problems they face, including stigma, discrimination and poverty. The paper argues that social workers can potentially fill a range of roles and are well placed to work in partnership with people with psycho-social disabilities. Particularly, they have skills in co-production of services, negotiation and advocacy that are required if individual funding is to be maximised for user control, social justice and personal recovery outcomes.

History

Journal

The British journal of social work

Volume

45

Issue

s1

Pagination

i98 - i116

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

1468-263X

eISSN

1468-263X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Oxford University Press