Case Management Standards 2013
Case Management Standards 2013
Case Management Standards 2013
Social
Work Case
Management
NASW Standards for
Social
Work Case
Management
National Association of Social Workers
Jeane W. Anastas, PhD, LMSW
President
NASW Staff
Tracy R. Whitaker, DSW, ACSW
Chris Herman, MSW, LICSW
Standard 2. Qualifications
The social work case manager shall possess a
baccalaureate or advanced degree in social work
from a school or program accredited by the
Council on Social Work Education; shall comply
with the licensing and certification requirements
of the state(s) or jurisdiction(s) in which she or
he practices; and shall possess the skills and
professional experience necessary to practice
social work case management.
Standard 3. Knowledge
The social work case manager shall acquire and
maintain knowledge of current theory, evidence-
informed practice, sociohistorical context, policy,
research, and evaluation methods relevant to case
management and the population served, and
shall use such information to ensure the quality
of case management practice.
Standard 5. Assessment
The social work case manager shall engage clients
and, when appropriate, other members of client
systemsin an ongoing information-gathering
and decision-making process to help clients
identify their goals, strengths, and challenges.
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and help clients achieve their goals. Case
management service plans shall be based on
meaningful assessments and shall have specific,
attainable, measurable objectives.
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Introduction
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among multiple personnel, including volunteers
(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2009).
Background
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The complementary and contrasting emphases
of the COS and settlement house movements
manifest, to some extent, in 21st-century social
work case management.
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health care (including, but not limited to,
ambulatory, acute, and rehabilitative care;
disease-specific services; maternal health;
palliative and hospice care; and public and
private health insurance programs)
housing
immigrant and refugee support services
income support programs
long-term services and supports
services for veterans and active duty
military personnel
tribal services.
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and job tasks and functions of each may differ.
Significant diversity of opinion exists regarding
the differences between case management and
these related roles and practices, and rendering
such distinctions lies beyond the scope of these
standards. Consequently, the terms case
management and case manager are used
throughout the standards. Nonetheless, these
standards may also be useful to social workers
whose primary function is described by related
terms such as care management or care
coordinationpractices which, similar to case
management, engage clients in the collaborative
process of identifying, planning, accessing,
advocating for, coordinating, monitoring, and
evaluating resources, supports, and services.
Such resources, supports, and services may
either be located in a single organization or
spread across numerous settings.
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consonanceamong the case managers
preferred approach, the value set and experiences
of clients, and the culture of the sponsoring
organization (Moxley, 2011, p. 277) exists.
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to ensure that social work case management
services are guided by the NASW Code
of Ethics
to advocate for clients rights to
self-determination, confidentiality, access to
supportive services and resources, and
appropriate inclusion in decision making
affecting their well-being
to encourage social workers to participate in the
development and refinement of public policy
(at the local, state, and federal levels) to support
clients participating in case management
to encourage social workers to participate in
the development, refinement, and integration
of best practices in case management and
to advance the practice of case management
as an integral component of organizations
and service delivery systems.
Definitions
Case management
A process to plan, seek, advocate for, and
monitor services from different social services or
health care organizations and staff on behalf of a
client. The process enables social workers in an
organization, or in different organizations, to
coordinate their efforts to serve a given client
through professional teamwork, thus expanding
the range of needed services offered. Case
management limits problems arising from
fragmentation of services, staff turnover, and
inadequate coordination among providers. Case
management can occur within a single, large
organization or within a community program
that coordinates services among settings
(Barker, 2003).
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Social worker
Within the United States, social worker refers to
an individual who possesses a baccalaureate or
masters degree in social work from a school or
program accredited by the Council on Social
Work Education. Although all 50 states and the
District of Columbia license or certify social
workers, licensure and certification laws vary by
state. Each social worker should be licensed or
certified, as applicable and required, at the level
appropriate to her or his scope of practice in the
practitioners jurisdiction(s).
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in case management services. Similar to
individual case management clients, family
members may cross the life span from childhood
to advanced age. Families may support each
other emotionally, financially, medically,
physically, practically, socially, and spiritually.
They may also provide assistance with decision
making related to health care, support services,
financial or legal matters, and life span planning.
Such support, which individuals and families
may or may not identify as caregiving, may be
provided on an intermittent, part-time, or
full-time basis and at close proximity or at a
distance from the client participating in case
management services. Furthermore, some family
members may receive remuneration for
caregiving services through consumer-directed
programs. The family system includes both the
client and the family. For the purposes of these
standards, however, the family system does not
include individuals whose primary relationship
with the client is based on a financial or
professional agreement. Nonetheless, such
individuals (including, but not limited to, health
care professionals, home care workers, attorneys,
fiduciary agents, guardians, other service
providers, and case managers themselves)
constitute an important part of the client system.
Culture
Culture influences the values, perceptions, and
goals every social worker and client brings to
case management. Cultural identification may
include, but is not limited to, race, ethnicity, and
national origin; migration background, degree
of acculturation, and documentation status;
socioeconomic class; age; gender, gender identity,
and gender expression; sexual orientation; family
status; spiritual, religious, and political belief or
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affiliation; physical, psychiatric, and cognitive
ability; and literacy, including health, behavioral
health, and financial literacy.
Cultural competence
The process by which individuals and systems
respond respectfully and effectively to people
of all cultures, languages, classes, races, ethnic
backgrounds, religions, and other diversity
factors [including, but not limited to, gender
identity and expression, sexual orientation, and
family status] in a manner that recognizes,
affirms, and values the worth of individuals,
families, and communities and protects and
preserves the dignity of each (NASW, 2007,
pp. 1213).
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Guiding Principles
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each individual experiences a mutually
influential relationship with her or his
physical and social environment and cannot
be understood outside of that context. This
ecological perspective recognizes that
systemic injustice and oppression underlie
many challenges faced by clients.
Strengths perspective. Rather than focus on
pathology, the social work case manager
elicits, supports, and builds on the resilience
and potential for growth and development
inherent in each individual. Client strengths
and assets may be intrapersonal, found within
the environment, or developed in response to
the environment.
Collaborative teamwork. The social work
case manager does not work in isolation.
Collaboration with other social workers,
other disciplines, and other organizations is
integral to the case management process.
Intervention at the micro, mezzo, and macro
levels. The social work case manager uses a
variety of approaches to effect change in
individuals, families, groups, communities,
organizations, systems, and policies. Advocacy
for systemic change plays a key role.
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closure (including termination or transition
follow-up).
Interpretation
The primary mission of the social work
profession is to enhance human well-being and
to help meet the basic needs of all people, with
particular attention to the needs of individuals
and communities who are vulnerable and
oppressed. This mission is rooted in core values
that constitute the foundation of social work and
underlie social work case management:
Service. The social work case manager applies
her or his knowledge and skills to support the
biopsychosocial well-being of clients and to
address challenges faced by clients. She or he
prioritizes service to clients above professional
or personal self-interest.
Social justice. The social work case manager
pursues change to reduce poverty,
discrimination, oppression, and other forms
of social injustice experienced by clients. She
or he provides services in a culturally and
linguistically appropriate manner and acts on
individual and systemic levels to ensure
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clients access to needed information, services,
and resources and to facilitate clients
maximal participation in decision making.
Human dignity and worth. The social work
case manager treats clients in a caring
manner, respecting their self-determination
and valuing their strengths. She or he strives
to enhance clients capacity to improve their
circumstances and achieve their goals.
Importance of human relationships. The
social work case manager promotes the role
of human relationships in the change process
and strives to strengthen relationships
between the client and other members of the
client system. The social worker cultivates a
therapeutic relationship with each client and
engages the client, to the greatest extent
possible, as a partner in goal identification,
service planning and implementation, and
practice evaluation.
Integrity. The social work case manager acts
in accordance with the mission, values, ethical
principles, and ethical standards of the social
work profession and uses the power inherent
in the professional social work role responsibly.
She or he undertakes all actions with respect
for clients goals, exercising judicious use of
self, avoiding conflicts of interest, and applying
professional judgment in presenting resource
options and providing services to clients.
Competence. The social work case manager
practices within her or his area of competence
and continually strives to enhance knowledge
and skills related to case management and the
population served. She or he recognizes that
self-care is essential to being present for
clients and attends to self-care accordingly.
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Social work case managers promote client
self-determination while helping clients navigate
complex service delivery systems. Client
involvement in goal identification and decision
making is a basic tenet of social work practice
and is upheld, to the greatest extent possible,
throughout the case management process.
Nonetheless, differences in the wishes,
perceptions, and capacity of clients and other
members of the client system can present
complex ethical and legal challenges to social
workers. When a clients decision-making
capacity is limited, the case manager should
collaborate with the individual who is legally
authorized to represent the clientsuch as a
power-of-attorney, health care agent, or
guardianwhile continuing to promote the
clients participation in case management. (For
the purposes of these standards, the individual
who is legally authorized to represent the client can
be substituted for the client, where appropriate.)
The social work case manager must also know
and comply with federal, state, local, and tribal
laws, regulations, and policies addressing topics
such as guardianship, parental rights, advance
directives, and reporting requirements for abuse,
neglect, suicide, threat of harm to others,
confidentiality and privacy of client information,
and use of health information technology.
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will best meet her or his needs. When a conflict
between primacy of the clients interest and the
goals or policies of organizations or delivery
systems occurs, the case manager should use
mechanisms such as peer review, ethics
committees, or external consultation, or should
advocate for internal change, to resolve the
dilemma. Creativity may be required to support
the client in accessing resources, supports, and
services needed to meet that individuals
priorities. If the conflict cannot be resolved,
mezzo- or macro-level action on the part of the
social work case manager (such as program
development, community organization, and
policy or legislative advocacy) may be needed to
prevent the recurrence of similar resource gaps.
Standard 2. Qualifications
The social work case manager shall possess a
baccalaureate or masters degree in social work
from a school or program accredited by Council
on Social Work Education; shall comply with
the licensing and certification requirements of
the state(s) or jurisdiction(s) in which she or he
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practices; and shall possess the skills and
professional experience necessary to practice
social work case management.1
Interpretation
Social work degree programs provide education
and training in social work values, ethics,
theories, practice, policy, and research. This
preparation is essential for any individual
engaging in the practice of social work. Social
work licensing and certification laws vary by
state. It is each social work case managers
responsibility to abide by the licensing and
certification laws and regulations of her or his
respective state(s) or jurisdiction(s). Adherence
to such laws and regulations includes, but is not
limited to, several responsibilities on the part of
the social work case manager:
acquisition and maintenance of social work
licensure or certification, as available for the
social workers educational level, professional
experience, and scope of practice
adherence to supervision requirements,
which may apply not only to supervisees, but
also to social work supervisors
practicing within the defined scope of
practice outlined by law or regulation.
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psychotherapy should have a masters degree in
social work and should either be licensed at the
clinical level or, if the licensing jurisdiction
allows, perform clinical tasks under supervision.
Regardless of educational background or
licensure status, every social worker should
accept case management duties or employment
only on the basis of existing competence. Should
the case manager need additional knowledge or
skill to perform case management responsibilities,
she or he should pursue professional
development activities (including supervision
and other activities, described elsewhere in these
standards) to acquire the necessary competence.
1
Degree and licensure or certification requirements are specific
to social work practice in the United States. NASW recognizes
that qualifications may differ outside the United States.
Standard 3. Knowledge
The social work case manager shall acquire
and maintain knowledge of current theory,
evidence-informed practice, sociohistorical
context, policy, evaluation methods, and
research relevant to case management and
the population served, and shall use such
information to ensure the quality of case
management practice.
Interpretation
Although case management is an integral
component of generalist social work education,
the practice of case management requires
specialized knowledge and skills as outlined in
these standards. Ideally, the social work case
manager attains such knowledge and skills
during her or his degree program, through
coursework and field practice experience related
to case management. Specialty practice
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credentials earned after graduation may indicate
expertise in case management or other areas
related to the setting in which the practitioner
works (such as a health care setting) or the
clientele served (such as children or older
adults). Whether through credentialing,
continuing education, or professional
experience, the social worker should continually
enhance her or his skills and knowledge related
to case management and the population served.
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Regardless of such distinctions, however, the
social work case manager applies knowledge
about human growth and development,
behavioral health, physical health, and family
relationships to enhance the biopsychosocial
well-being of clients. As a resource expert, the
social worker supports clients in navigating
service delivery systems, accessing resources,
and identifying service gaps and barriers. Each
case managers understanding of the professional
social work role also guides her or his
interactions with, and on behalf of, clients.
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Family relationships
family systems and family life cycles
family caregiving roles and support needs
interdependence in care partnerships
(within family systems, for example)
Resources and systems
programs and systems related to the case
managers client population and practice
setting (such as resources specific to aging,
behavioral health, children, economic
assistance, employment, families, health,
housing, immigration, legal concerns, social
support, and tribal systems)
policies, eligibility requirements, and
financial and legal concerns affecting case
management clientele
systems functioning and theory
Professional social work role
the multifaceted social work roles and
functions related to both case management
and the case managers client population or
practice setting
research and evaluation methods, including
knowledge of how to analyze professional
literature and incorporate research findings
into practice
interdisciplinary collaboration
appropriate professional boundaries and
use of self
signs of, and strategies to address,
ethical dilemmas, compassion fatigue,
burnout, vicarious traumatization, and
professional grief
use of the strengths perspective to improve
clients perceptions of their own abilities
and facilitate their participation in the
case management process
culturally and linguistically appropriate
service delivery.
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Standard 4. Cultural and Linguistic Competence
The social work case manager shall provide and
facilitate access to culturally and linguistically
appropriate services, consistent with the
NASW Indicators for the Achievement of
the NASW Standards for Cultural Competence
in Social Work Practice.
Interpretation
The increasing cultural and linguistic diversity
of the United States and many other countries
requires social workers to strive continually for
cultural and linguistic competence. The social
work case managers recognition and affirmation
of cultural and linguistic diversity are critical to
both therapeutic alliances with clients and
cooperative working relationships with colleagues.
Such diversity includes, but is not limited to,
race, ethnicity, socioeconomic class, gender,
gender identity, gender expression, sexual
orientation, religion, age, health and family
status; cognitive, physical, or psychiatric ability;
and sensory differences, preferred language,
migration background (within-country
migration, immigration, refugeeism, and
documentation status), degree of acculturation,
level of formal education, and literacy (including
health, behavioral health, and financial literacy).
It can also include vocational affiliations, such as
participation in the military or involvement in
veterans services. Given the complexity of
cultural identity, the social work case manager
needs to approach every interaction with clients
and colleagues as a cross-cultural exchange,
recognizing the potential for value conflicts and
being proactive to ensure that such conflicts do
not undermine practice.
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Cultural competence begins with the social
work case managers cultural self-identification.
Cultural self-awareness is fundamental to
recognizing and addressing how ones own
cultural values, beliefs, biases, experiences, and
practices affect interactions with clients and
colleagues. The social worker who practices
such self-assessment can then recognize how
cultural identity, in its multifaceted expressions,
is central to the resilience of the individuals,
families, and communities with whom she or he
interacts. Specifically, the social work case
manager needs to appreciate and affirm clients
cultural values, beliefs, and practices, especially
the ways in which culture influences perceptions
and practices related to human growth and
development, including death and dying;
definitions of family; family communication
patterns and life cycle functions, including child
rearing and caregiving; illness, disability, and
treatments for health and behavioral health
conditions; help-seeking behaviors; and decision
making related to education, employment,
financial or legal matters, health care, and housing.
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Cultural and linguistic factors influence not only
case managerclient relationships, but also
organizational policies and societal structures
and dynamics. The social work case manager
should advocate for organizational practices and
policies that promote cultural diversity among
case management staff and throughout the
organization and a work environment, policies,
and practices supportive of multiculturalism.
Standard 5. Assessment
The social work case manager shall engage
clientsand, when appropriate, other members
of client systemsin an ongoing information-
gathering and decision-making process to
help clients identify their goals, strengths,
and challenges.
Interpretation
Biopsychosocial assessment is the foundation of
social work case management and is conducted
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in collaboration with the client. Assessment is a
complex function requiring openness to a wide
variety of information, both verbal and nonverbal,
presented by the clientand, when appropriate,
other members of the client systemin the
context of the social environment. Using empathy,
client-centered interviewing skills, and methods
appropriate to clients capacity, the social work
case manager engages clients in identifying their
needs and strengths. On the basis of this
discussion, the social worker supports the client
in establishing priorities and goals. Because
assessment guides service planning and
implementation, the case manager needs to
complete initial assessments in a timely manner.
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clearly to maximize the clients understanding of
the information sought and how it will be used
to benefit that individual.
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relationships with community organizations
or other social supports
physical, cognitive, and psychosocial
functioning, including ability to fulfill
social roles
desire and capacity for independence
desire for support from other members of the
family or client system
desire and capacity of family or other members
of the client system to support the client
need for economic or other psychosocial
resources, supports, and services
ability to navigate relevant service systems
(such as educational, employment, health
care, housing, legal, nutritional, social
services, or transportation systems)
individual and systemic barriers to clients
participation in the community or use of
resources and services
changes in resources, policies, and programs
needed to support the client and, if applicable,
other members of the family system
behavioral health, including coping style,
crisis management skills, substance use
history, and risk of suicide or homicide
health conditions and impact of those
conditions on the clients goals
risk of abuse, neglect, or exploitation of or by
the client, and underlying causes for such
mistreatment
life span planning (which may include
advance care planning, anticipation of
caregiving responsibilities, permanency
planning for minor children, retirement
planning, or other domains)
past strategies used to resolve the clients
concerns or enhance the clients strengths
clients perceptions of changes needed to
improve her or his situation
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clients engagement in case management
process and participation in shared
decision making
congruence with and adherence to
preexisting service plans
patterns of service over- and underutilization.
Interpretation
Social work case management services should be
planned to meet the biopsychosocial needs and
goals of clients and should be delivered in a
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manner that ensures confidentiality in
accordance with the NASW Code of Ethics.
Service planning, implementation, and
monitoring draw not only on ongoing,
comprehensive social work assessments, but
also, if appropriate and available, on the input
of other members of the client system.
Collaboration with clients throughout the
service planning, implementation, and
monitoring process is critical to ensure that
services meet clients identified priorities; are
clearly communicated; are delivered or accessed
in a timely, effective manner; and achieve
positive outcomes.
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development of, and concordance with, the
plan. The social worker should provide a
written, plainly worded copy of the service plan
to the client. In this manner, the case manager
and the client may both use the document as a
guide to plan implementation and evaluation.
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enhance the responsiveness of service
providers) for individuals, families, and
communities
permanency, life span, and advance care
planning
individual counseling and psychotherapy
drawing on a variety of modalities, such as
cognitivebehavioral or solution-focused
approaches
couples and family counseling
family-team conferences
group interventions (such as
psychotherapeutic groups, professionally
facilitated psychoeducational groups, or
peer-led support groups)
family caregiving support interventions
mediation and conflict resolution
crisis intervention
disaster planning and preparedness
advocacy on behalf of, and in collaboration
with, clients
team, organizational, and interorganizational
service planning and collaboration
resource information and referral (for
example, financial, housing, legal, medical,
or behavioral health resources)
systems navigation and coordination of
services, especially during transitions of
care or other significant life transitions
ongoing monitoring and evaluation of the
service plan
planning for service transfer or termination.
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of a health condition). Throughout the
implementation phase, monitoring enables the
social worker to respond promptly to changes in
client needs and help the client alter services
accordingly.
Interpretation
Effective advocacy involves helping case
management clientele identify and define their
strengths, needs, and goals and communicate
those needs and goals to service providers and
decision makers. Social workers strive not only
to promote clients self-advocacy, but also to
enhance the capacity of communities to
support clients biopsychosocial quality of life.
Creativity and flexibility are central to successful
advocacy efforts with, and on behalf of, case
management clients.
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Advocacy is often required to ensure that
organizations and service delivery systems
recognize the strengths and needs of clients
make services accessible
provide services appropriate to each clients
circumstances
deliver services in an effective and timely
manner
continue services for an appropriate length
of time and
prepare clients, other members of the family
system, and service providers for transitions
when services are discontinued or transferred.
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resources to facilitate clients access to
high-quality services
community needs assessments and
community organizing
social and political action to foster
environments that support client strengths
analysis of historical and current local, state,
and national policies as they affect case
management clientele, especially historically
marginalized or underresourced populations
education of the public, the media,
corporations, and policymakers (including
legislative activity) regarding clients
strengths, needs, and concerns
use of multiple media, including written
materials, oral presentations, and computer
technology, to achieve advocacy goals
integration of organization- and
population-level case management data in
advocacy efforts, with respect for client
confidentiality and privacy.
Interpretation
As described throughout these standards,
collaboration with clients constitutes the
foundation of social work case management;
thus, the client (and, when appropriate, other
members of the family system) is at the center of
the team. At the same time, social workerclient
communication is but one aspect of the
cooperation needed to help clients achieve their
goals. Multiple service providers and
organizations are often involved in supporting a
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client. In such circumstances, designation of a
primary case manager (ideally, at the discretion
of the client) and written interorganizational
agreements can be useful. Even when such
measures are not feasible, collaboration within
teams and organizations, as well as among
organizations and service delivery systems, is
essential to continuity of services. Such
collaboration also enhances organizational and
systemic capacity to support clients and reduces
inappropriateness, duplication, or fragmentation
of services.
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facilitate communication between clients and
providers/organizations
share team leadership in planning and
providing services to case management clients
foster an organizational culture that
promotes effective, coordinated services for
case management clients
develop and maintain partnerships across
disciplines, organizations, and the service
spectrum to enhance access to and continuity
of services for case management clientele
integrate a strengths perspective in program
and organizational administration to maximize
and sustain human and fiscal resources on
behalf of case management clients
manage personal and interpersonal processes
at the intraorganizational, interorganizational,
and community levels to optimize services for
case management clientele.
Interpretation
Evaluation entails soliciting and integrating
internal and external feedback on the process
and outcomes of social work case management
practice. Practice evaluation is vital in ensuring
that services provided to clients are appropriate,
effective, and timely in helping clients achieve
their goals. Moreover, outcomes from
evaluations are increasingly used for position
justification, performance review, practice
standards, goal setting, risk management,
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utilization review, and research efforts. Similar
to other aspects of case management practice,
client involvement is essential, as is protecting
the privacy of the client and, when applicable,
other members of the clients family system.
43
evidence base for social work case
management
application of evaluation and research
findings, including evidence-based practice, to
facilitate client goal setting and to enhance
practice and program quality and outcomes
dissemination of evaluative data to clients,
payers, and other service providers on
request, and with consideration for clients
rights to privacy and confidentiality.
Interpretation
Clear, concise, and ongoing documentation
of social work practice facilitates clear
communication with other service providers
and organizations, thereby promoting continuity
of services. Documentation also serves as a
foundation for service planning and practice
and program evaluation. Moreover, written
information about clients is often needed for
service reimbursement, for utilization review,
and to promote organizational accountability to
payers or funding sources. Updated, concise
records also provide support for social work case
managers in the event of a legal review.
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management clientele. Thus, documentation
should reflect clients informed consent
regarding all aspects of case management
practice: assessment; service planning, delivery,
and monitoring; practice evaluation and
improvement; and transfer or termination of
services. The social work case manager can
ensure her or his practice reflects clients
involvement by incorporating in documentation
clients own words, stories, goals, and feedback.
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clients written release. The case manager should
explain the limits on confidentiality to clients
both orally and in writing at the onset of
services, to ensure that the client has the
information needed to provide informed
consent, and should facilitate the clients
understanding of how the organization responds
to requests for confidential information.
Interpretation
Social workers, managers or administrators, and
organizations have joint responsibility for
establishing and maintaining a workload that
allows for adequate and appropriate
interventions and monitoring of services and
outcomes. A workload consists of any social
work functionsuch as direct contact with or
on behalf of clients, administration, policy,
research, or educationperformed in support of
case management services. The workload
reflects the needs and goals of the clientele
served and may include social work coverage
outside of regular office hours. The caseload, in
contrast, refers to the number of clients served
at a given point in time. Multiple variables affect
both caseload size and workload manageability:
case management model or paradigm in
which the social worker practices
organizational mission and services
program funding sources
breadth and complexity of client needs
and goals
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availability of resources to meet clients needs
and goals
number of clients the organization serves
amount of time the case manager needs to
spend with, or on behalf of, various clients
duration of organizational service across
clientele and for specific clients
scope of social work case managers
professional responsibilities
administrative responsibilities and available
support
access to technology.
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effective manner. Thus, the organization should
establish policies and develop systems to
maintain reasonable caseloads and workloads for
both supervisors and staff. Such policies and
systems should reflect findings from practice
evaluation and, to the extent available, research.
Additional social work research regarding social
work case management caseloads and
workloads, with a variety of populations and
within diverse practice settings, is needed.
Interpretation
Social workers must engage in ongoing
professional development to maintain
competence in case management and to add
depth to their areas of concentration.
Employing organizations should encourage
and support social workers participation in
professional development activities. Such
activities may include receiving or providing
social work continuing education, training,
supervision, consultation, or mentoring, as
well as peer review, research, publication, and
volunteer activities. Numerous opportunities
for professional development exist within
NASW, other professional organizations,
schools of social work, and organizations
providing services to or on behalf of various
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constituencies (such as youths, older adults, or
people with disabilities) at the local, state,
national, and international levels.
50
Educating other social work case managers is
another important component of professional
development. Mentoring, supervising, and
teaching all provide opportunities for social
workers to ensure the professions continued
growth and excellence within case management.
References
51
Culhane, D. P., Parker, W. D., Poppe, B., Gross,
K. S., & Sykes, E. (2007). Accountability,
cost-effectiveness, and program performance:
Progress since 1998. In D. Dennis, G. Locke, &
J. Khadduri (Eds.), 2007 National symposium on
homelessness research. Retrieved from the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services,
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Web site: http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/homelessness/
symposium07/culhane/
52
National Association of Social Workers. (2002).
NASW standards for continuing professional
education. Retrieved from www.socialworkers.org/
practice/standards/NASWContinuingEd
Standards.pdf
53
Stuart, P. H. (2008). Social work profession:
History. In T. Mizrahi & L. E. Davis
(Eds.-in-Chief), Encyclopedia of social work
(20th ed. Vol. 4, pp. 156164). Washington,
DC, and New York: NASW Press and Oxford
University Press.
54
Acknowledgments
55
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