Happy #MDW: SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE WITH VETERANS & MILITARY FAMILIES

On this Memorial Day Weekend, we celebrate & hold dear to our hearts honorable US service men and women who have sacrificed their lives for their country.  Social work practice with veterans and military families is one of the most fascinating kinds of social work.  Social workers on the Western Slope are poised to be advocates for veterans! Learn more today by contacting: rachel.forbes@du.edu

NASW Social Work with Veterans and Military Families

Social Work and Service Members: Joining Forces to Support Veterans and Military Families

Upcoming Webinars

NASW’s free five-course training module on Social Work with Service Members, Veterans, and Their Families is now available atwww.naswwebed.org

Archived webinars will be available here

Dr. Biden created Joining Forces, along with First Lady Michelle Obama, to bring attention to the unique needs and strengths of America’s military families. Joining Forces is a comprehensive national initiative to mobilize all sectors of society to give our service members and their families the opportunities and services they have earned. NASW has been a proud member of Joining Forces since 2011 and is committed to educating and training all social workers so that they are prepared to meet the needs of those who have made incredible sacrifices for the United States.Key Social Work Commitments Include:

Free Online 5-course Training Module

  • Community Resources for the Military and Veteran Population (Rafiq Raza, MSW)
  • Service Members and Veterans in Treatment: Evidence-Based Interventions (Dwayne L. Buckingham, PhD, LCSW)
  • Military Sexual Trauma: Responding to Active-Duty Service Members and Veterans (Terri Spahr Nelson, MSSW, LISW, ACSW)
  • Social Work with Children in Military Families (Julie Canfield, PhD, LICSW)
  • Military Culture (Adriana Rodriguez, LCSW and Rebecca Andersen, MS)

Professional Credentials for Social Workers

  • Military Service Member and Veteran Family—Social Worker
  • Military Service Member and Veteran Family—Advanced Social Worker
  • Military Service Member and Veteran Family—Clinical Social Worker

Standards for Social Work Practice with Service Members, Veterans, and Their Families(also available for purchase through the NASW Press).

Announcements

veterans help starts here adFrom NASW.com: The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) is committed to supporting the health and well-being of our nation’s service members, veterans, and their families. This webpage provides resources intended to assist professional social workers who work with or are interested in learning more about working with veterans and military families. The external resources provided on this page are not a comprehensive list and are meant to serve as information for social workers to enhance their work. NASW does not specifically endorse all of these organizations, agencies, or services.Check back often as we add additional tools and resources including Standards for Practice and a Professional Credential for Social Work with Veterans and Military Families which are in development.

For more information on NASW’s veterans and military family efforts, contact Elizabeth Hoffler, MSW, ACSW, at ehoffler@naswdc.org.

VA Mental Health


Social Work in the Armed Forces

There are many opportunities available to professional social workers interested in serving veterans and military families. Regardless of practice area, chances are that nearly all social workers will serve this population in some capacity whether through mental and behavioral health therapy, social services, housing, health care, care coordination, or a variety of other services. Other social workers may work primarily with service members or veterans through their private practice specifically aimed at serving them, or through veterans service organizations or other targeted agencies. Still other social workers will choose to serve in the Armed Forces, including the Air Force, Army, and Navy.

What the Air Force Says: Military life can obviously be stressful on Airmen. It can also be stressful on their families. As an Air Force Clinical Social Worker, you’ll help families cope with typical challenges as well as ones unique to the military. You’ll also have the opportunity to develop your leadership skills as you plan and implement multiple programs.

What the Army Says: Social workers were first commissioned as officers in the U.S. Army in July 1945, although social workers assisted soldiers during both World War I and II as American Red Cross employees. Military and civilian social workers serve their country and the Army in multiple ways spanning the spectrum of clinical, administrative, and research social work skills. Licensed Clinical Social Workers serve as officers, both in the Active Component, and in the Reserve Components.

What the Navy Says: Whether they’re defending our country or helping those who cannot help themselves, Sailors and Marines must endure long separations from loved ones and exception emotional circumstances. So must their families. Social workers are crucial in helping everyone stay strong. Navy social workers connect those who serve and their family members to the care and support they need. They counsel individuals who are about to deploy and their families. They offer crisis intervention for those who have undergone a traumatic experience. They lead workshops on a variety of topics, like transitioning from deployment to everyday life.

Social Work in the United States Department of Veterans Affairs
Inevitably, when servicemen become disabled, the first question they have is how soon they can get back to their unit. After a doctor has explained why they cannot return to active duty, the social worker picks up the pieces.” –Meyeroff (2009)

Social workers are important providers of services to service members, veterans, and their families. The United States Department of Veterans Affairs is the largest employer of Master’s level social workers in the United States. Social Workers have worked in the VA since 1926. Today, social workers offer a variety of services to veterans and their families, including resource navigation, crisis intervention, advocacy, benefit assistance, and mental health therapy for conditions such as depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and drug and alcohol addiction. Social workers in the VA also ensure continuity of care through admission, evaluation, treatment, and follow-up processes, and they provide assessment, crisis intervention, high-risk management, advocacy, and education to veterans and their families. Social workers offer a particular skills set and knowledge base that is beneficial, if not indispensable, to veterans who may return from war with a host of challenges. Veterans are served well by social workers’ person-in-environment perspective and their ability to solve multi-factor problems. Learn more about social work at the VA.

Social Work in the United States Public Health Services

Behavioral health officers within the Commissioned Corps are psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, clinical social workers, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and psychiatrist nurses. These officers are needed by America now more than ever. Untold numbers of U.S. wounded warriors are returning home from combat with post-traumatic stress, traumatic brain injuries, and other undiagnosed behavioral health issues. Through our partnership with the Department of Defense, established in 2008, you can assist our Nation’s warriors, their family members, and other individuals with behavioral health needs. In addition to serving wounded warriors, our behavioral health officers can also be found providing clinical care, responding to public health disasters and emergencies, and developing and implementing mental illness prevention and treatment programs that benefit entire communities.

This resource excerpt has been copied from NASW.com. Thank you, NASW for sharing this wonderful information with us!

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