Description
Social Work Records is a single source that: introduces the 15 principles of good records and their usefulness to assess the quality, appropriateness, and impact of services; presents an overview of the content of social work records using the Service-Centered Record format; focuses on the structure of the record by describing and analyzing a wide range of approaches, formats, and forms that are used to select and organize information; offers solutions to issues in practice from both the direct-service and the administrative perspective; provides a thorough analysis of records and the law.
“This book is timeless. It provides a comprehensive view of the importance of social work records.”— Brenda Lindsey, University of Illinois
1. The Principles, Functions, and History of Records
Fifteen Principles of Good Records / A Brief History of Social Work Recording / Contemporary Issues / Recording and Professional Judgment
2. Service-Centered Recording
The Service-Centered Record / Elements of Content / What Should Be Excluded from Records
3. Records Used in Social Work Education
Process Recording / The Teaching/Learning (T/L) Record / Essential Recording / Improving Education for Recordkeeping
4. The Structure of Records I: Narrative and Other Clinical Records
Narrative Reports / The Problem-Oriented Record / Monitoring Movement / Goal Attainment Scaling
5. The Structure of Records II: Forms
Creating Forms / Examples of Forms
6. Practice Issues
The Quality of Records / Benefits of the Recording Process / Records That Clients Prepare / Recordkeeping in Private Practice / Records and Managed Care / Practice Guidelines
7. Administrative Issues
The Cost of Recordkeeping / The Security of Records / Computers and Records / Records in Research
8. Records and the Law
Basic Privacy Principles / A Brief History of Federal Privacy and Records Legislation / Important Federal Laws Related to Social Work Records / HIPAA and Its Relationship to State Laws / HIPAA, State Law, and the Records of Specific Client Populations
9. Records and the Courts
Why Records Would Be Used in Court / Subpoenas / Defining the Record under the Subpoena / Personal Notes / Privilege / Responses to Requests for Records / Retention of Records / Expungement of Records




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