Hitchington
Wokey Dick
- Location
- New York-Paris-Pokemon
No, this Tory government is crap (which includes Johnson, Cameron, May, Osbourne, Hancock, Sunak...)I am quite sure you do.
But....
The "overworked Social Worker" has been a "thing" for most of my adult life (I am 74). I know the Conservatives may have been in Government for the majority of that time, but, not ALL the time. My experiences of Social Services have been spread over the past 45-50 years. In my experience, no matter which party was in power, or what funding levels were in place, little of nothing has changed at "the sharp end" ie the interface with the public.
In short, it appears to me, shouting "Boris is crap" (which, I agree, he is) will not "fix" the situation, so, whilst it might relieve a bit of frustration, it will do little of nothing to improve the situation.
Yes, we know social work has always been the poor neighbour of health. But under New Labour there was real investment right across the board. In the Blair and Brown years I worked in a crisis intervention team that was well funded and we had access to SALT, OT, psychology; there was real joined up thinking and prevention. This was a mainly adult service and we did a lot of transition work for under 18s coming into adult services. New Labour had a lot wrong with it, but in this area it was real progress.
That intention service I worked in is gone, it was integrated into another team and eventually the focus is back on reactive intervention. There aren't the resources, staff and money for proactive work anymore.
This starts and stops with a government hell bent on cutting for ideological reasons. It has an effect right across the board. Moral is low, we've lost colleagues to Covid 19, we've lost colleagues because of mental health illness and we've lost colleagues because they can't take it anymore.
I'm seriously thinking of quitting myself, but I have a mortgage, a car in the garage waiting for a new gearbox when I can afford it. But right now there are children and families who are in desperate need of some kind of intervention and me walking away is not an option for them.
My caseload is mainly CIN and short breaks. I don't have any CP or LAC cases, thank goodness. I focus on assessments and reviews but I also do communication and PBS intervention because the waiting lists for CAMHS is astronomical; it could be 12-18 months before a child is seen after referral and even them CAMHS will only take on the very severe cases.
Everyone on my caseload is seen in line with statutory requirements and I have to make a judgement with what to prioritise. It's the children and families who aren't know to us I worry about. There are families who are very demanding of our limited and precious time. We have to work to a systemic model and encourage families to use their own strengths to function because we can't do 95% of what they're asking for. Again it's easy for the quiet families to drop under the radar and again that's what keeps me awake at night.
You have your own experiences as a social worker, and I have mine. My experience over the past 20 odd years has allowed my to form my opinion of what's going wrong in social care.