Social work tool fills gap and supports aging in place
Researchers have developed a psycho-social assessment tool to guide social work assessments and help social workers build proactive partnerships with older people.
Developed in collaboration with aged care social workers, researchers from Bolton Clarke Research Institute and the University of Melbourne have developed the tool for all staff experience levels.
Bolton Clarke Research Institute Senior Research Fellow Rajna Ogrin said the tool, published in Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, includes questions identified as important by experienced social workers supporting older people, which can act as guides for novice social workers.
“Social workers currently working with older people of people with compromised health and wellbeing in the community identified the lack of evidence-based tools available to them,” Ogrin said.
“The assessment tool supports social workers to be more proactive in building partnerships with older people to focus on early identification of issues, proactive planning and engaging people to make informed and educated choices to shape later life and mitigate against risks.
“Engaging users in the tool’s development ensured it included relevant components and was fit for purpose.”
The assessment tool was developed with social workers from Bolton Clarke’s multidisciplinary at-home support team after a gap was identified by social worker Aliki Karantzoulis.
“People who want to age at home may require health and aged care support, and the tool helps provide the necessary person-centred review of their home and social context,” Karantzoulis said.
“This research is important as it has generated a tool that is geared to assessments being done with older people in their homes where, in the main, people seek to remain as they age.”
Ogrin said further work was needed to integrate social work assessments with other health assessments and to pilot the tool with a broader group of social workers and service users.
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