Assignment - Psychology
Part 2 of assignment 10 Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=wssr20 Journal of Social Service Research ISSN: 0148-8376 (Print) 1540-7314 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/wssr20 Instrumental, Interpersonal or Holistic: Social Work Managers’ Conceptions of Safety in the Psychosocial Work Environment Kettil Nordesjö To cite this article: Kettil Nordesjö (2020) Instrumental, Interpersonal or Holistic: Social Work Managers’ Conceptions of Safety in the Psychosocial Work Environment, Journal of Social Service Research, 46:6, 789-800, DOI: 10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 © 2019 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. Published online: 12 Sep 2019. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 1209 View related articles View Crossmark data https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=wssr20 https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/wssr20 https://www.tandfonline.com/action/showCitFormats?doi=10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 https://doi.org/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=wssr20&show=instructions https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=wssr20&show=instructions https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/mlt/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/mlt/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690&domain=pdf&date_stamp=2019-09-12 http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690&domain=pdf&date_stamp=2019-09-12 Instrumental, Interpersonal or Holistic: Social Work Managers’ Conceptions of Safety in the Psychosocial Work Environment Kettil Nordesj€o Centre for Work Life and Evaluation Studies, Malm€o University, Malm€o, Sweden ABSTRACT Social work managers are accountable for risks and safety in the psychosocial work environ- ment. This article aims to understand how social work managers deal with safety in the psy- chosocial work environment in social service organizations with potentially conflicting logics of regulation and security, by answering the questions: How do social work managers con- ceptualize safety in the psychosocial work environment?; What are the implications of differ- ent conceptions of safety in the psychosocial work environment for social work management? Through a qualitative phenomenographic analysis of semi-structured inter- views with 27 managers in the Swedish social services, three conceptions were found: an instrumental, interpersonal and holistic conception. As each conception encompasses the former and thus increases the level of comprehensiveness, tensions between the logics of regulation and security increases. Managers with a comprehensive conception must there- fore reflect on the way regulations for safety may conflict with social relationships. Implications for social work management are the need to discuss how safety management relates to social work professionalism, and the self-regulation due to the integration of safety thinking in social work professionalization. Future research could investigate how the conceptions relate to managerial and professional practice and how different parts of the social services conceptualize safety. KEYWORDS social work management; safety management; psychosocial work environment; phenomenography Introduction Any explanation of the nature of social work is dependent on a close reading of risk as a signifi- cant feature of modern societies (Webb, 2006). Today, social work organizations are required to deal with risks in different areas. One area that has gained a lot of attention in recent years is the psychosocial work environment, where social work managers, in particular, are accountable for dealing with issues of excessive caseloads, moral stress and clients’ threats on a daily basis. This article investigates how social work man- agers in the social services deal with safety in the psychosocial work environment to handle such risks, in the presence of two different logics (Webb, 2006). In the first logic, the logic of regu- lation, social work managers enforce and imple- ment external pressures of auditing and standardization, which regulate risk through tasks and procedures that are fundamental for an organization to operate, and correspond to the societal and political pressures of human service organizations (Garrow & Hasenfeld, 2010). On the other hand, in the second logic, the logic of security, social work managers must provide safety for their employees by establishing values and norms of health and safety in the workplace (Dollard & Bakker, 2010). Supportive manage- ment is important for social workers’ retention (Frost, Hojer, Campanini, Sicora, & Kullburg, 2018), trust between managers and employees is fundamental (T€orner, Ekl€of, Larsman, & Pousette, 2013) and implementation of safety measures is best carried out bottom-up through the involvement of employees (Wikman & Rickfors, 2018). CONTACT Kettil Nordesj€o [email protected] Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/kettilnordesjo Centre for Work Life and Evaluation Studies, Malm€o University, Malm€o 205 06, Sweden. � 2019 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by- nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SERVICE RESEARCH 2020, VOL. 46, NO. 6, 789–800 https://doi.org/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690&domain=pdf&date_stamp=2020-10-07 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3565-6563 http://www.linkedin.com/in/kettilnordesjo http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ https://doi.org/10.1080/01488376.2019.1658690 http://www.tandfonline.com Social work managers need to acknowledge potential tensions between these logics, since they may be in conflict with each other. Regulating the psychosocial work environment according to a logic of regulation may create calculation and sus- picion and hinder trust in accordance with the logic of security, which is difficult to reestablish when violated (cf. Webb, 2006). This resonates with the increase of proceduralism and bureau- cratization of social work practice that may lead to a more top-down controlling approach, which, impedes bottom-up participation, constrains the relationship between social workers and clients, and almost always result in more procedures to regulate practice (Jones, 2010). Similarly, risk management procedures may leave relational aspects of social work practice under-emphasized and under-theorized (Broadhurst, Hall, Wastell, White, & Pithouse, 2010). Also, focusing on con- forming to external rules and routines for safety may affect social work practice by hindering flexi- bility and innovation, increasing a fear of making errors and creating distrust between managers and employees (Jerak-Zuiderent, 2012; Lawler, 2015; T€orner et al., 2013). How social work managers deal with safety in the psychosocial work environ- ment in an organization with two different logics may thus have implications for social work prac- tice as well as the relationship with clients. In the remainder of this introduction, literature relevant to the management of risks and safety in social work is discussed. The introduction ends with the article’s aim and research questions. Literature Review The management of safety in social work impli- citly relates to risks. The traditional quantitative risk analysis assumes an objective and true level of risk that can be assessed through standardized techniques. But what is seen as dangerous and an acceptable risk in the psychosocial work environ- ment might vary between contexts and is influ- enced by social processes and cultural patterns (Antonsen, 2009). For example, risks can be rele- vant to self-identity as a part of the social work profession (Kemshall, 2010) where one has to “take it”. Safety, on the other hand, refers to a situation where a statistical risk is deemed acceptable, a feeling of security and control, and constitutes a practice that aims at reducing the likelihood of hazardous events (Antonsen, 2009). While risk management refers to the calcula- tion of risks in a logic of regulation, research on safety climate stresses that it is impossible to make rules for every situation. Therefore, it is bet- ter to create a climate where people feel confident to assess situations and act accordingly in order to follow and improve both rules, and to enhance their skills to cope with problematic situations (Neal & Griffin, 2002). A “good” safety climate is thus not only about making people aware of rules and procedures, but about making them acknowl- edging new problems of safety and taking initia- tives to handle such problems that have not yet been addressed in rules and procedures (Thol�en, Pousette, & T€orner, 2013). This contrast between compliance and participatory safety behavior res- onates with several dichotomies in the safety lit- erature (eg. from safety-I to safety-II, Hollnagel, 2014). Wikman and Rickfors (2018) argue that safety work may either be implemented top-down from managers to employees through rules and standards (stability) or implemented bottom-up (adaptability). Where stability is built on individ- ual conformity to rules and routines and is undermined by improvization, adaptability pre- supposes employees’ varying ways of performing tasks as the foundation of safety work. Still, it is not a question of either/or; organizations with unpredictable events and non-routine tasks need to be decentralized in order to adapt to local chal- lenges, but still require some sort of centralization to be managed as a system (Wikman & Rickfors, 2018). The recent construct, psychosocial safety climate (PSC), is an example of proactive struc- tures for safety in the work environment, created bottom-up with the participation of employees (Dollard & Bakker, 2010). Such initiatives must be promoted through stable management support in order to be translated from an espoused to an enacted safety climate (Yulita, Dollard, & Idris, 2017). In sum, the safety literature generally argues for a bottom-up and adaptability perspec- tive in the management of safety in the work- place. Still, a top-down and stability perspective through management support is acknowledged to ensure a systemic approach in organizations. 790 K. NORDESJ€O The two perspectives of the safety literature resonate with the character of social work man- agement, where managers are forced to deal with both organizational and professional ideals and tasks. A results-based, task-oriented leadership needs to be balanced with a process and people- oriented leadership where professionals are sup- ported (Schmid, 2010). There are thus two sides to social work management. On the one hand, management is broadly associated with efficiency, regulation, bureaucratic processes and adminis- trative duties (Shanks, 2016). Consequently, while social work practitioners value professional indi- vidualized judgement for its flexibility and responsiveness to individual factors, social work managers value predictable knowledge for its consistency and accountability (cf. Hafford- Letchfield & Lawler, 2013; Kemshall, 2000; Webb, 2006). On the other hand, social work managers will not necessarily show loyalty and commit- ment to the organization rather than the profes- sion. They often have a social work background, see themselves as social workers rather than man- agers (Evans, 2011), and are as much recruited and valued by their employees for their social work competence as for their managerial skills (Shanks, 2016). Like their employees, they have discretionary space and may be considered street- level bureaucrats with “a certain leeway in defin- ing the organizational conditions of policy work achieved by street-level workers” (Hupe, Hill & Buffat, 2015, p. 325). This is also suggested to hold true for senior managers (Evans, 2016). Hence, social work managers are not necessarily characterized by, and limited to, managerial levels and may take different positions (cf. Shanks, Lundstr€om, & Wiklund, 2015). In the context of safety in the psychosocial work environment, these positions may allow them to manage safety corre- sponding to stability or adaptability, a compliance or participatory safety behavior, and more gener- ally, the logics of regulation and security. Aim and Research Questions Although research has highlighted dualities in safety management and how social work manag- ers may take different managerial positions, little research has combined the two research strands and addressed how social work managers approach the management of safety in the psy- chosocial work environment in organizations with potentially conflicting logics of regulation and security. One way to investigate this issue is to study social work managers’ conceptions of safety. Depending on these conceptions, manag- ers may differ in approaches to the formulation and implementation of safety management, and subsequently social workers’ strategies (cf. Lambley, 2010). Exploring managers’ conceptions is essential for elucidating what support is required in implementation (cf. Mosson, Hasson, Wallin, & von Thiele Schwarz, 2017). The aim is to understand how social work managers deal with safety in the psychosocial work environment in social service organizations with potentially conflicting logics of regulation and security. This is done by interviewing 27 social work managers on different levels in the social services in a large Swedish municipality. The research questions are: 1. How do social work managers conceptualize safety in the psychosocial work environment? 2. What are the implications of different concep- tions of safety in the psychosocial work envir- onment for social work management? Next, the research methods are described and the results are presented: social work managers’ conceptions of safety in the psychosocial work environment. These three conceptions are then discussed in relation to the presented dualities and logics, followed by a conclusion. Methods In order to describe how managers conceptualize safety in the psychosocial work environment, a phenomenographic approach was used (Marton, 1981). It starts from the understanding of a prob- lem or the situation to be dealt with in order to understand how people deal with it – in this case safety in the psychosocial work environment (Avby, Nilsen, & Abrandt Dahlgren, 2014). There are a limited number of qualitatively different ways to understand and make sense of a phenom- enon. These conceptions signify the relationship JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SERVICE RESEARCH 791 between what is conceived and how it is conceived (Sandberg, 2000). Phenomenography involves description rather than interpretation, aims to achieve conceptual rather than topical description, and investigates differences rather than similarities (Dahlgren & Fallsberg, 1991). Sample The study was carried out within the social serv- ices departments of two city districts in a Swedish municipality. In each district, managers from two different units of the departments were interviewed: child welfare and social assistance. In one of the districts, managers working with addiction and debts were also interviewed. The units are both people-processing and people- changing (Hasenfeld, 1983), meaning they both categorize clients for other parts of the social services and work with face-to-face social work to improve clients’ situations. Particular to the Swedish context is the way in which the Social Services Act does not give much guidance in individual cases, giving managers and case- workers extensive discretion in individual assess- ments. Similar to an American (Kim & Kao, 2014), European (Frost, Hojer, Campanini, Sicora, & Kullburg, 2018) and Swedish (Tham & Meagher, 2009) pattern for social workers, both areas have a high caseworker turnover, indicating potential work environment problems. The districts were chosen due to their shown interest in the standardization of social work and managers’ psychosocial work environment in an earlier research project. Department managers were contacted and an invitation to an interview was sent to 32 managers on all levels in the districts’ units, of which 27 agreed. As other phenomenographic stud- ies have shown, 20 interviews is an adequate target in order to find varying conceptions (e.g. Sandberg, 2000). Managers differed in level and years of experience (see Table 1). In general, the higher the managerial level, the longer the experience. All inter- viewees had a bachelor in social work and experi- ence of social work practice. It should be noted that deputy heads of units do not formally have staff liability but supervise professionals and are a link to professional practice. Still, several managerial duties and tasks are delegated to them, which makes them both qualified and significant to contribute to the overall aim of the study. In all, the variation in units, districts, managerial levels and experience ensured a variety of social service managers. Instrument A semi-structured interview guide was used with the themes background, management and leader- ship, psychosocial work environment and risks and safety. For this phenomenographic article, three questions were essential: � “What does safety in the psychosocial working environment mean for you in your workplace?” � “How do you manage and influence safety in the psychosocial work environment?” � “What are the challenges to managing safety in the psychosocial work environment?” The questions were thus open-ended in order to leave it to the interviewee to define, reason and reflect, but structured in order to capture both definitions and action in relation to safety in the psychosocial work environment. The inter- view guide was pilot tested and adjusted in another municipality prior to the study. Procedure Managers were interviewed individually by the author during one month in early 2018. Interviews took place Table 1. Interviewees in relation to district, unit, level and experience as manager. Manager characteristic Number of interviewees Sum District 1 2 19 8 27 Unit Child welfare Social assistance 13 13 (þ1 HoDi) 27 Management level Deputy head of unit (dHoU) Head of unit (HoU) Head of department (HoDe) Head of district (HoDi) 13 11 2 1 27 Years of experience as manager 0-1 2-5 6-10 10- 6 7 6 8 27 792 K. NORDESJ€O in interviewees’ workplaces and lasted 40–90minutes. They were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and organ- ized in the Nvivo 11 software. The study has been sub- ject to ethical review and approved by a Swedish regional ethical review board (ref 2017/816). Information about the study and interview was sent in advance, and informed consent was obtained from all interviewees. Data analysis The seven-step process of phenomenographic analysis by Dahlgren and Fallsberg (1991) was used (cf. Avby et al., 2014): 1. The transcripts were read in their entirety to get acquainted with them. 2. Significant statements by the interviewees relat- ing to the research question were marked. 3. The statements were then compared in order to find similarities and differences. This resulted in four different aspects of safety in the psycho- social work environment, i.e. different individual ways to describe the phenomenon: basis for safety, the relationship between risks and safety in social work, managing safety, and when, where and how questions of safety are discussed. 4. Statements with similarities were then grouped in empirically based categories as conceptions of safety in the psychosocial work environment. 5. Similarity between statements was explored and described in tandem with the aspects from step three. 6. When sufficiently clear, the categories were labeled the instrumental, interpersonal and hol- istic category. They are delimited conceptions of managing safety in the psychosocial work environment and do not represent individual qualities among interviewees. 7. Categories were hierarchically ordered in an out- come space by searching for relationships between them. The hierarchy indicates that a higher category encompasses the lower catego- ries. There is thus an increasing comprehensive- ness from the instrumental to the interpersonal and finally the holistic conception, where the lat- ter contains elements of the former two. The seven-step process is not to be followed strictly but allows for an interplay between the steps (Dahlgren & Fallsberg, 1991). Results The phenomenographic analysis resulted in three categories, i.e. qualitatively different conceptions of safety in the psychosocial work environment (see Table 2). The three categories are described in the remainder of this section, starting from the lowest category, the instrumental. The Instrumental Conception The first category emphasizes rules and regula- tions to handle risks and ensure safety. Managers’ primary concern is to make sure employees Table 2. Social work managers’ conceptions of safety in the psychosocial work environment. Aspect Category A. Perception of basis for safety B. Description of relationship between risks and safety in social work C. Description of managing for safety in the psychosocial work environment D. Description of when, where and how questions of safety are discussed in the workplace 1. Holistic Support structures Social work is unpredictable. Reflections on and ambivalence to conflict between relational and regulative ideals. Create structures for the unexpected. Create sense of joint responsibility. Involve employees. Create climate to encourage discussions on safety. Case meetings. Build capacity through education and professionalization. 2. Interpersonal Relations Social work is morally and emotionally stressing. Society is tougher and less solidary today. Relations with employees and clients are fundamental. Be observant to identify stress. Dialog with employees. Be a role model. Collegial support. Relieve and listen. Discussion ex post. Informal discussions. 3. Instrumental Regulations There is little knowledge about clients. Physical surroundings can handle external threats. Risks as threats and violence. Emphasize rules and routines. Individual responsibility. Managers’ responsibility ends with reminders. Workplace meetings. Discuss plan against threats and violence. Introductions in technology and physical surroundings. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SERVICE RESEARCH 793 follow routines for safety. The relationship between risks and safety in social work is the unpredictability and lack of knowledge of new clients, which demands safety measures in terms of physical surroundings and alarms. Managers’ signatures on diverse documents make them more visible, and some managers have been physically hurt some time during their careers. A characteristic experience is that threats and vio- lence have become more common and have come closer, not least through social media: It’s easier to send threats today through emails and to post something on Facebook. [Clients] record conversations [with caseworkers] and post them on the web and make fun of them [ … ] Caseworkers find it uncomfortable … this just didn’t exist before. Or they post entire investigations that you’ve written. People read them online and say, “Oh, such worthless investigations, this caseworker is incompetent, she does bad assessments” and so on … it didn’t happen before. (HoDe 1) Managing safety is about giving employees information and reminding them about wearing personal alarms from the reception in client meetings and during home visits in child welfare. It is crucial for employees to be updated on policies, plans, rules and routines concerning threats and violence. The individual responsibility is emphasized: I can remind them constantly, but it is still the responsibility of every employee to know about those routines that apply in the workplace on safety, privacy, safety and risk assessment. Constantly checking that they’re doing the right thing is impossible. I’m thinking they’re adults working here who should be aware of these routines when it comes to these very serious things and follow them. I expect everyone to follow them. I might be stupid but I can’t expect less because then I would have to walk around and be worried all the time, you understand what I mean? (dHoU 11) One senior manager who takes this view is aware that not all employees follow the routines that make managers responsible for incidents: We’ve said that now people have to sign agreements so that we know they’ve read [the routines]. Should anything happen, us managers are responsible for everyone having read them and understood them. That’s something you have to continue to work with, when you deal with threats and violence. (HoDe 1) Joint discussions on questions of safety in this category take place at workplace meetings where updated routines or plans against threats and vio- lence are presented. If something happens, rou- tines are revised. Managers can use introductions to show how physical surroundings and technol- ogy work in practice to minimize risks: Today I had a new employee and we went down to the reception and into a visitor room and talked about how to act when you have a [client] visit. How should you be placed? “Your visitors should sit here and then you take that chair and then you have the door there and then you have the alarm there.” On a very practical level. [ … ] I’m clear with the fact that I give the conditions, but if you do not “wear your protective clothing” and something happens … my responsibility ends here, I can’t control anything beyond this. (HoU 19) In sum, safety in the instrumental category starts from the idea that there is little knowledge about new clients. They can get violent, so it is important to use routines and technology in the physical surroundings to carry out social work. Since safety is based on individual conformity to rules, managers need to remind employees and even obtain written agreements of the acknow- ledgement of rules and routines. The Interpersonal Conception In the second category, relationships between people are the basis for maintaining safety. Managers must be attentive of their employees’ stress levels and have an open dialog in case something happens. As this category encompasses the previous category, rules and routines are not absent. But they are seen as a safety net and a structure to be toned down, since it in itself can contribute to threats and violence. For example, the relationship between risks and safety in social work is described as people becoming pressured and unpredictable due to social workers’ inter- ventions in their lives. One manager relates clients’ unpredictability to a lack of communica- tion between caseworkers and clients and between caseworkers and other public actors that could lead to denied applications: We’ve worked a lot with communicating to the client that if you don’t go to the [municipal job center] and 794 K. NORDESJ€O you get a rejection, you need to call the client and ask how it happened. “We have talked about this, if you don’t participate, you don’t have the right to social assistance.” To communicate more. It’s safety thinking, the importance of the client’s understanding so that a rejection does not come as a surprise. If you become fuzzy and afraid of being clear, then you will create unnecessary situations. (HoU 15) Safety in the psychosocial work environment is thus not as much a question of prediction and regulation of external threats, but of good rela- tions with clients. One manager in social assist- ance relates safety to a climate of trust where employees are not afraid to speak out but feel safe with each other and with their managers. Burnout is not only a result of high caseloads, but of relationships: If you have very good relationships in a workplace then the risk of burnout is reduced. Because there is somebody who catches you when you fall. The feeling of safety and comfort at work. And especially when working with vulnerable people as we do. It gets under your skin, people feeling bad, other actors who want us to do more and clients’ parents who call because their children haven’t received money. That’s why you need to have a feeling of safety. I also think that in situations of threats and violence … the worst part is if you don’t dare to talk about what you have experienced because it is expected of …
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The greatest obstacle From a similar but larger point of view 4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition After viewing the you tube videos on prayer Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages) The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough Data collection Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option.  I would want to find out what she is afraid of.  I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych Identify the type of research used in a chosen study Compose a 1 Optics effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources Be 4 pages in length soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test g One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti 3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. 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