(caps)All human beings have certain common basic needs: physical ,
emotional, intellectual, social, and spiritual. In adverse circumstances these common needs are felt with a special poignancy. The hypothesis in this study is that the following emotional and
social needs, common to
all
people ,become intensified when a
person seeks help from a
social agency :
the need
to
be treated
as
an
individual ,
to
communicate his feelings ,
to
be
accepted ,not
to
be judged ,
to make one '
sown decisions ,and
to
have one 's
secrets
kept confidential .
Consciously
or
unconsciously ,
the client senses
a
danger
to
these basic rights and needs .
The intensified aware
ness
of
these
is the origin
of
the dynamic interaction
of
attitudes
and feelings between the client and the caseworker.
Primary Social Work Method
1. This interaction has three directions. The first is from the client to the caseworker. The client, because he must reveal his problem and some of his weaknesses to the caseworker, has a fear that he may be treated as “a case” rather than as an individual, that he may be judged and condemned, that he may be forced to do something he does not want to do, or that his confidences may be revealed.
2. The second direction is from the caseworker to the client. The caseworker, principally through his over -all attitude which has some emotional content ,assuages the fears of the client by communicating a respect for the client's basic human rights and for his integrity as a person.
3. In the third direction , again from the client to the caseworker , the client becomes aware of the caseworker's attitude and, in some manner, manifests this awareness to the caseworker.
These three directions are like forces moving in circle fashion; their beginnings and ends are imperceptible ; actually , they are separable only conceptually. They are living, vibrant forces that endure in some degree throughout the life of the case. The following seven principles of social casework is given by Biestek and explained in detail in his book "The Casework Relationship."
(toc) #title=(Table of content)
Principle Individualization
Principle of Purposeful expression of feelings
Principle of The controlled emotional involvement
There are three components in the caseworker's controlled emotional involvement: sensitivity, understanding ,and response. In actual practice they are necessarily and intimately interrelated, but for clarity in analysis they will be discussed separately.
Principle of Acceptance
Principle of Non-Judgmental Attitude
The nonjudgmental attitude is a quality of the casework relationship ; it is based on a conviction that the casework function excludes assigning guilt or innocence, or degree of client responsibility for causation of the problems or needs ,but does include making evaluative judgments about the attitudes , standards , or actions of the client ; the attitude ,which involves both thought and feeling elements , is transmitted to the client.
Principle of Client Self-Determination
The principle of client self -determination is the practical recognition of the right and need of clients to freedom in making their own choices and decisions in the casework process . Caseworkers have a corresponding duty to respect that right ,recognize that need , stimulate and help to activate that potential for self direction -by helping the client to see and use the available and appropriate resources of the community and of his own personality . The client 's right to self determination-,however, is limited by the client's capacity for positive and constructive decision making , by the framework of civil and moral law, and by the function of the agency.
Principle of Confidentiality
Confidentiality is the preservation of secret information concerning the client which is disclosed in the professional relationship .Confidentiality is based upon a basic right of the client ; it is an ethical obligation of the caseworker and is necessary for effective casework service . The client 's right ,however, is not absolute .Moreover , the client ' s secret is often shared with other professional persons within the agency and in other agencies ; the obligation then binds all equally.