Social Work
Across
- 1. The verbal and non-verbal exchange of information, including all the ways in which knowledge is transmitted and received.
- 4. The process of determining the nature, cause,progression and progbnosis of a problem and thepersonalities and situations involved therin; the social work function of acquiring an understanding of aproblem, what causes it, and what can be changed to minimize or resolve it.
- 7. Refers to the protection of clients' private information unless the client has given valid, informed consent for disclosure of said information.
- 8. A written statement of a person's wishes regarding medical treatment, often including a living will, made to ensure those wishes are carried out should the person be unable to communicate them to a physician.
- 12. An explicit statement of the values, principles, and rules of a profession, regulating the conduct of its members.
Down
- 2. A process by which resources and services are assessed and coordinated at both the client and systems levels, involving assessment for health and social services, coordination and planning, monitoring of service delivery, and advocacy for client rights and entitlements. bestpractice A technique or method that has been shown through experience and research to reliably lead to a desirable result. The term implies that this technique or method is more efficient and/or effective at delivering a desired outcome than any other technique or method.
- 3. In the social work interview, the social worker's revelation of personal information values, and behaviors to the client.
- 5. One of social work's core ethical responsibilities toclients. It refers to a social worker's responsibilities in understanding the relationship between culture and personal identity, recognizing the uniqueness and strengths within varying cultures, and experiencing and studying cultural and ethnic diversity.
- 6. The ability to acqire and process the verbal and other cues of another and generally comprehend the meaning of the communication.
- 9. The act of intervening on behalf of an individual, group, or community to represent, defend, and supportaccess to resources and/or services, and to address structural obstacles or barriers that restrict civil rights and principles of social justice.
- 10. The ability to identify with or vicariously experience the feelings, thoughts, situation, or attitude of another individual.
- 11. The professional activity of helping individuals, groups, or communities enhance or restore their capacity for social functioning and creating societal conditions favorable to this goal.