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Explaining Self-Reported Resilience in Child-Protection Social Work: The Role of Organisational Factors, Demographic Information and Job Characteristics

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Child protection social work is a stressful occupation that results in workforce concerns about poor levels of staff retention and high levels of inexperience. This paper presents results from a… Click to show full abstract

Child protection social work is a stressful occupation that results in workforce concerns about poor levels of staff retention and high levels of inexperience. This paper presents results from a cross-sectional survey and reports findings from a sample of 162 Northern Irish social-workers. The sample were measured for ‘resilience’ (acceptance of self and life and individual competence, RS14 Resilience Scale.), ‘burnout’ (emotional exhaustion EE; depersonalization DP; personal accomplishment PA, Maslach Burnout Inventory) and organizational subscales (workload, community, values, equity and control, Areas of Worklife Scale). Pearson zero-order correlations showed that higher resilience was associatedwith lower EE and higher PA. Hierarchical linear regression analysis was used to identify unique demographic and work specific predictors of resilience in addition to the Areas of Worklife subscales of Control and Values. The final model significantly accounted for 27% of the variance in resilience scores providing increased knowledge about resilience enhancing factors.As resilience is not an apolitical concept, the wider debates and politics of resilience are acknowledged. Specifically, contextual concerns are addressed which relate to the organizational factors that impact on social workers. The paper concludes calling for organizational interventions to support resilience in social workers and maintain expertise in child protection services.

Keywords: protection social; child protection; social work; resilience; work

Journal Title: British Journal of Social Work
Year Published: 2019

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