Case Managementreports
Case Managementreports
Case Managementreports
Social Technology refers to the social welfare and development approaches, strategies, models of
intervention that responds to the emerging needs of the clientele.
Social Technology Development is the process of planning, designing and testing of social welfare
technology and enrichment of existing program towards its replication and institutionalization by the
local government units to address emerging social welfare issues and problems.
Administrative Order No. 34, s. 2003 – Framework for Social Technology Development
- 6 steps
- Policy Planning Analysis
- Program Design
- Program Planning
- Pilot Testing
- Final Program Review
- Institutionalization and Replication
- 5 steps
- Social Technology Identification
- Design Formulation
- Pilot Implementation
- Evaluation and Documentation
- Marketing and Promotion
It provides faster and better protection through improved and appropriate models for better and faster
programs and services.
Case Management
- one of the primary places in human service systems where the whole person is taken into
account.
- Unlike specific services, case management does not focus on just one problem but rather on the
many strengths, needs, and personal concerns a person brings.
- Assessing the individual’s total situation (addressing needs and problems found in the
assessment)
- Improving the overall situation (using the person’s strength and weaknesses)
- Prevent problem to grow worst (which will cost more remedy in the future)
Why do we use case management?
What is the optimum amount of service that a social worker can offer to its client?
- CASE MANAGEMENT
- The optimum amount of service that we can offer our client is the service that doesn't end in the
termination of the helping relationship, but beyond the coverage of the helping contract.
Philosophy
- Social work case management is a method of providing services whereby a professional social
worker assesses the needs of the client and the client’s family, when appropriate, and arranges,
coordinates, monitors., evaluates, and advocates for a package of multiple services to meet the
specific client’s complex needs.
- Case management is a specialty practice within the human services professions. Its underlying
premise is that everyone benefits when clients reach their optimum level of self-management
and functional capacity
- The therapeutic relationship between practitioner and client plays an integral role in case
management. Developing this kind of relationship with your client enables you to better engage
them and develop the appropriate interventions with them.
- A large part of this principle is providing a safe environment for your clients to share their
stories, problems, and feelings. Clients have indicated that the following four personality
characteristics are most important to them in a social worker: Understanding, Emphatic,
Pleasant, Ability to put one at ease
- As you recognize the dignity, worth, and rights that belong to each of your clients, you can instill
a sense of self-determination as you guide them. This will empower your clients to reach higher
levels of life satisfaction. This will also leave them with the confidence to make healthy choices.
- The personal empowerment dynamic is similar to a traditional clinical notion of self-
determination whereby clients give direction to the helping process, take charge and control of
their personal lives, get their “heads straight,” learn new ways to think about their situations
and adopt new behaviors that give them more satisfying and rewarding outcomes. Personal
empowerment recognizes the uniqueness of each client.
- Practical Steps: Help the Client Define and Own Their Story, Recognize the Client’s Individuality
Social work literature abroad during the last two decades has been enriched by reports of
studies as well as article about a concept – case management – considered useful particularly for at-risk
population. It is cited for having transformed traditional practice (case work, group work, and
community organization) into a new and more useful model. It involves the social worker in varied
activities like planning, linking, mediating, networking, and coordinating, in order to help bring about
resolution of the client’s problem.
The situation in the Philippines has always been different. The reality is that most of our social
workers, regardless of field of setting, have to deal with multi-problem clients whose situations all for
many different social work activities the composite of which is now called “case management”.
Case management is now accepted as social work function that is very appropriate in the
country particularly for client’s especially in difficult circumstances like abused children, women, older
persons, victims of armed conflict, victims of natural disaster, persons with disabilities, and the
chronically and mentally ill.
In the late 1800s, a formal attempt was made to organize the delivery of services to people in
need. Initially, the Charity Organization Society took control of this approach, making the collection of
information and the delivery of services more systematic. In the course of its work, the society
developed casework as a useful method for tracking needs, progress, and changes in each case. As the
people has more needs than problems, beyond poverty, the need to coordinate these services became
important to prevent duplication. Casework has also was employed as a means of tracking and using
scarce resources to the best advantage.
In the 1960s, the process of deinstitutionalization meant that individuals once housed in the
institution were now placed in communities where they needed considerable support to live more
independent lives, as a result, casework became ever more important for a larger number of people.
In the 1980s, the term caseworker evolved into case manager, and these managers took on
greater responsibility for managing resources, finding innovative supports, and coordinating services.
Agencies began to use case management as a procedure to assess needs, to find ways to meet those
needs, and to follow people as they use those services. In addition to keeping an eye on how scarce
resources were spent, case managers where charged with taking a more holistic approach to their
clients, looking at all their needs rather than addressing only those that brought the person in for
assistance. As for this charged came the directive to develop individualized plans constructed specifically
for that person and not a cookie cutter approach to supplying services.
Today, case managers as seen as a significant service in all most social service settings and are
viewed as the most important way to present relapse, track clients’ needs, and support progress
towards group health.