Sat.Nov 13, 2021 - Fri.Nov 19, 2021

article thumbnail

What is Self-Doubt, And How Can We Handle It?

My Brains Not Broken

There are many symptoms for anxiety and anxiety disorders: feelings of panic or doom, shortness of breath, trouble sleeping, a general sense of uneasiness…the list goes on and on. Symptoms of anxiety can create challenges with how we view the world and view ourselves, creating issues with self-worth, confidence and self-esteem. But lately I’ve noticed one one area that I don’t often see people discuss – self-doubt.

Anxiety 246
article thumbnail

What Do You Know About Disability Cultural Competence?

Swhelper

Elspeth Slayter. Recently, I had the opportunity to give a webinar on disability cultural competence to social service workers, but was met with many blank stares. As a disabled social worker myself, I often notice that the disability community is not recognized as a cultural group. Disability is also not considered as a social identity in diversity […].

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

11 Steps to Implementing a DSP Peer Mentoring Program

Relias

Retaining direct support professionals (DSPs) is a seemingly never-ending challenge for organizations that serve people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Agencies are always looking for ways to help new hires understand and get excited about the job, engage their employees, and recognize the experience of their veterans. A DSP peer mentoring program is a great way to increase employee engagement and retention.

article thumbnail

An adopted foster child dies in Hawaii – but nobody seems to be asking the right questions

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Ariel Sellers, as she was known before her adoption, was reported missing by her foster/adoptive parents. Now they've been charged with her murder. (Honolulu police dept. photo) We don’t know why six-year-old Ariel Sellers was taken from her parents. But we do know this: ? Relatives were ready to take her in. They say Hawaii’s family police agency, known as “Child Welfare Services” (CWS) ignored them. ?

Adoption 104
article thumbnail

Why Every Small Business Needs an HCM Solution: A Comprehensive Guide

Managing HR tasks like payroll, compliance, and employee data can overwhelm small businesses. That’s where a Human Capital Management (HCM) solution comes in. Our eBook, Why Every Small Business Needs an HCM Solution: A Comprehensive Guide , shows how an HCM system automates tedious processes, ensuring your business stays compliant and efficient. You’ll learn how to simplify payroll, eliminate costly errors, and empower your employees with self-service tools.

article thumbnail

Five Tips for Managing Self-Doubt

My Brains Not Broken

This week, I’ve been doing a lot of research and reflection about self-doubt, what it looks like and the mental health challenges it creates. Even though it’s been helpful to understand more about doubt and the role it plays in our mental health, managing or overcoming self-doubt is more than just being aware of it. Here are five tips that I hope will be helpful to you on your journey to better manage your self-doubt.

article thumbnail

Self-Care A-Z—Getting Fired, Letting Go, Allowing Space: Re-Storying Self-Care

The New Social Worker

Five years ago, I was fired. I loved my job. But being fired was one of the best things that ever happened to me. Dr. Erlene Grise-Owens reflects on getting fired, letting go, and allowing space for new meanings.

104
104

More Trending

article thumbnail

The $20 million boondoggle that perfectly illustrates the banality of child welfare thinking

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Compared to the billions of dollars wasted on things like harming children by institutionalizing them , the small item discussed in this story in The Imprint is barely a drop in the bucket - and odds are it won’t actually make things worse. But it’s hard to imagine anything that more perfectly captures the banality of child welfare thinking than this waste of $20 million: Five organizations will spend this federal grant money to create a “Quality Improvement Center on Engaging Youth in Finding P

article thumbnail

Q&A with Rita Soronen – National Adoption Month

National Casa Gal

Soronen, who currently serves on the National CASA/GAL Association for Children Board of Trustees, sat down with National CASA/GAL during National Adoption Month to talk about kinship care adoption and the importance of nurturing family connections for children in foster care. Read More. The post Q&A with Rita Soronen – National Adoption Month appeared first on National CASA/GAL Association for Children.

article thumbnail

Alcohol and Bloating: How Drinking Affects the Stomach

Gateway Foundation

After drinking alcohol, you may have noticed concerns like stomach pain, discomfort or bloating. While occasional abdominal bloating is normal, alcohol-related abdominal bloating may cause more uncomfortable symptoms and indicate other medical conditions or complications. To improve alcohol-related stomach bloating and discomfort, you must first understand how your digestive system processes alcohol.

article thumbnail

From the Journals: Self-Care Insights from COVID-19

Social Work Blog

[Note: Below is an excerpt from an article in the most recent issue of the journal Health & Social Work , co-published by NASW and Oxford University Press. The article was written by Christine M. Rine, PhD, associate professor, Department of Social Work, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. This article is free to be read on the Oxford University Press website.].

article thumbnail

Best Practices to Streamline Compensation Management: A Foundation for Growth

Speaker: Joe Sharpe and James Carlson

Payroll optimization can be one of the most time-consuming and complex factors of small business management. Yet, organizations that crack the code on streamlining employee compensation often discover innovative avenues for growth. With the right strategies in place, outsourcing and streamlining payroll processes can result in substantial time and resource savings.

article thumbnail

You get what you pay for: How Florida shifted funding priorities to foster care

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

Child welfare’s foremost data nerd has weighed in on the mess in central Florida child welfare caused by – well caused by a lot of things, including the dreadful performance of Eckerd Connects. Eckerd is the “lead agency” in the region (though not for long) under Florida’s largely privatized system of family policing. (Florida calls it a “Community-Based Care” (CBC) system of “child welfare,” but both those terms are euphemisms.

article thumbnail

National Adoption Month: family connections are key

National Casa Gal

During National Adoption Month, the National CASA/GAL Association for Children recognizes that connections to extended family give children and youth a sense of belonging and love. Read More. The post National Adoption Month: family connections are key appeared first on National CASA/GAL Association for Children.

article thumbnail

Anxiety Effectively Treated with Exercise

Swhelper

SWHELPER. Both moderate and strenuous exercise alleviate symptoms of anxiety, even when the disorder is chronic, a study led by researchers at the University of Gothenburg shows. The study, now published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, is based on 286 patients with anxiety syndrome, recruited from primary care services in Gothenburg and the northern part […].

Anxiety 88
article thumbnail

Fostering system at risk of reaching ‘breaking point’, warns Ofsted

Community Care

England’s care system needs an “urgent boost to the number of foster carers” to avoid reaching “breaking point”. That was the warning from Ofsted as it released its annual fostering statistics last week , which showed there were 88,180 approved fostering places, 55,990 of which were filled, and 45,370 approved fostering households, as of 31 March 2021.

article thumbnail

5 Must Haves for Case Management

Thousands of nonprofits rely on case management software to help collect data, manage programs, coordinate with agencies, and provide life-changing health and human services. Adopting a cloud-based case management platform is essential for nonprofits and government agencies to operate more efficiently and make better use of their funding and budget.

article thumbnail

NCCPR news and commentary round-up, week ending November 17, 2021

NCCPR Child Welfare Blog

? Let’s start by looking ahead to Saturday – it’s time for National Adoption Day! Cake! Ice Cream! Balloons at the courthouse! Because what could be more appropriate than a festival commemorating the aftermath of termination of children’s rights to the parents they were born with. If termination of parental rights is child welfare’s equivalent of the death penalty, then what is Adoption Day but a macabre celebration of family executions ?

article thumbnail

National CASA/GAL Association for Children featured in Gabriel & Co. “Stronger with Lyndon” Instagram series November 17

National Casa Gal

The “Stronger with Lyndon” series aims to continue the promotion and support of the Stronger Together necklace ($100) benefitting National CASA/GAL. Tune in to Gabriel & Co.’s Instagram @gabrielandco, Wednesday, Nov. 17 at 12 p.m. ET / 9 a.m. PT. Read More. The post National CASA/GAL Association for Children featured in Gabriel & Co. “Stronger with Lyndon” Instagram series November 17 appeared first on National CASA/GAL Association for Children.

92
article thumbnail

New Preschool Program in Oregon is a Model for the Nation—But Challenges Remain

Swhelper

Mary King. By Mary King and Lisa Dodson In November 2020, voters in Multnomah County, home to the city of Portland, resoundingly approved the creation of a new, universal preschool program—a program that could serve as a model for desperately needed preschool and childcare investments for the entire country. All three- and four-year-olds in Multnomah county will be able […].

article thumbnail

What Is Drug Tourism?

Gateway Foundation

Drug tourism is when people travel to a select destination to buy or use drugs for any reason. These journeys can be for recreational or personal use and don’t even have to be a long trip. For example, people traveling from Kansas to Colorado to smoke marijuana would be participating in drug tourism. These drugs… The post What Is Drug Tourism?

article thumbnail

Get Connected: Using Social Media for Social Work Success

Speaker: Gary Direnfeld, MSW, RSW.

You may have the clinical skills to manage a private practice, but your success could actually hinge on marketing skills. For a thriving practice, you need to differentiate yourself from others and present yourself in a way that attracts referrals. These days, much of that happens online, including on social media. In this webinar, Gary Direnfeld will discuss how social media marketing can help you build your private practice and grow your client base.

article thumbnail

IFSW Human Right Commision – Europe Statement on the Refugee Crisis at the Belarus / Polish Borders

International Federation of Social Workers

On the Polish-Belarusian border, human rights are violated, as well as conventions signed by the Polish government, such as the European Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. The Polish and Belarus governments and […].

article thumbnail

Evolving with Mindfulness in a Changing World

R.E.A.L. Social Workers

1905 – 2005. My grandmother was born in 1905. She lived 102 years before her death. She saw amazing inventions and experienced an amazing life. Now when I use the word “amazing,” I am using it as it is defined by Merriam-Webster, ‘causing great surprise or wonder.’ This does not always mean that her experiences were all wonderful. It means that over her lifetime, she witnessed or lived through many astonishing, astounding, dumfounding, jaw-dropping, flabbergasting, shocking, stunning, stup

Anxiety 52
article thumbnail

How to Win America’s Fight Against the Opioid Epidemic

Swhelper

Peggy Compton. Every day, an astonishing 115 Americans die from opioid overdoses, according to a 2017 report from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Approximately half of these deaths are due to the misuse or abuse of prescription opioid painkillers (such as Vicodin, Oxycontin, and morphine). Beyond that, increasingly, deaths come from overdoses of the illicit drugs […].

article thumbnail

Does Anxiety Go Away After Using Heroin?

Gateway Foundation

A powerful motivation that draws people to drugs like heroin is an underlying mental health condition. While everyone experiences anxiety or stress occasionally, anxiety disorders make it difficult to deal with daily life without persistent feelings of fear or dread. To cope, some people experiment with illicit substances. Heroin may seem to offer relief from anxiety… The post Does Anxiety Go Away After Using Heroin?

Anxiety 52
article thumbnail

Empower Your Nonprofit With Effective Payroll & HCM Services

Managing a nonprofit involves many challenges, but payroll and HR shouldn’t be among them. Our guide, "A Buyer’s Guide to Payroll & HCM Services," helps nonprofits choose the best provider. Efficient payroll services ensure timely, accurate payments, vital for maintaining staff and volunteer morale. Compliance support helps navigate complex labor laws and avoid costly fines.

article thumbnail

What we’re reading: Poorly Understood: What America Gets Wrong About Poverty

National Casa Gal

Co-authored by Rank, Lawrence M. Eppard, and Heather E. Bullock, the book covers myths, stereotypes, and misperceptions surrounding the issue of poverty, as well as the realities of poverty. The book also provides insight on society’s view of economic prosperity. Read More. The post What we’re reading: Poorly Understood: What America Gets Wrong About Poverty appeared first on National CASA/GAL Association for Children.

52
article thumbnail

Trina Shanks Named Fellow of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare

Michigan Social Work

Trina Shanks was named a Fellow of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare. The Academy is an honorific society of distinguished scholars and practitioners dedicated to achieving excellence in the field of social work and social welfare through high-impact work that advances social good. Fellow status is among the highest professional accolades bestowed to social work scholars; Michigan Social Work now has 12 academy members.

Welfare 52
article thumbnail

Air Pollution Disproportionally Affects People of Color, Lower-Income Residents in DC

Swhelper

SWHELPER. The rates of death and health burdens associated with air pollution are borne unequally and inequitably by people of color and those with lower household income and educational attainment in Washington, D.C., according to a new study. Air pollution is considered the leading environmental risk factor to health, and recent efforts have successfully brought down […].

76
article thumbnail

Signs of an Anxiety Attack

Gateway Foundation

Have you ever felt so stressed or worried that you couldn’t fall asleep at night? Maybe you laid in bed, unable to turn off your thoughts, feeling your heart pound in your chest. If this sounds familiar, you may know what it’s like to have an anxiety attack. Anxiety attacks can be extremely uncomfortable and… The post Signs of an Anxiety Attack appeared first on Gateway.

Anxiety 52
article thumbnail

‘Limit profit-making from children’s services or risk cartel’, directors urge

Community Care

Profits in children’s services should be banned or limited to tackle a market ripe for a “cartel” of providers, the Association of Directors of Children’s Services (ADCS) has warned. ADCS made the call in its response to the Competition and Markets Authority’s (CMA) interim report from its study of the children’s social care market, issued last month.

article thumbnail

My Morning Practice of Healing from PTSD Daily

Abuse Survivor

In 2014, when I started really taking my healing seriously, I was having a very difficult time coping with my CPTSD due to child abuse and domestic violence. Although these things were in my past, they were still at the forefront of my mind. I was a mess with anxiety attacks, nightmares, and generally was tired of existing in all of the pain I was experiencing.

PTSD 49
article thumbnail

Project-Based Learning for the Virtual Classroom

Swhelper

Wendy Taylor. Project-based learning (PBL) may not be the first thing that teachers consider when planning for remote or hybrid lessons. However, with a little creativity and an organized approach, project-based learning can engage students in a way that may be lacking during typical virtual instruction. So what is it, exactly? PBL, simply put, is an approach […].

article thumbnail

Effects of Substance Use on Your Appearance

Gateway Foundation

Many people know substance use disorders have adverse medical and psychological side effects. However, substance use can also influence your physical appearance — and that’s what other people notice first. Because illicit drug use has an impact on the brain and body, your physical appearance can show the impacts over time. From your teeth to your… The post Effects of Substance Use on Your Appearance appeared first on Gateway.

article thumbnail

Cap on care costs ‘will do little for less well off’ following government change

Community Care

The government’s care funding reforms will do very little for those with longstanding needs and modest wealth, following changes that reduce their benefit for the less well-off. That was the warning today from Andrew Dilnot, whose commission devised the blueprint for the cap on care costs that the government will bring in from 2023, after the changes announced yesterday by care minister Gillian Keegan.

article thumbnail

Vulnerable children unable to access help due to austerity, says inquiry

The Guardian

Lords report says problems for 1m youngsters escalated because of the lack of services able to intervene early More than a million vulnerable children in England are growing up emotionally damaged and with reduced life chances as a result of billions of pounds of austerity cuts to family support and youth services, according to a cross-party House of Lords inquiry.

19