TY - JOUR
T1 - What Are Child-Care Social Workers Doing in Relation to Infant Mental
Health? An Exploration of Professional Ideologies and Practice Preferences
within an Inter-Agency Context
AU - Woodcock, Ross J
AU - Hooper, Lucy
AU - Stenhouse, Elizabeth
AU - Sheaff, Rod
PY - 2009/3/31
Y1 - 2009/3/31
N2 - Infancy is a crucial time for interventions to reduce later developmental difficulties. In
England, recent policy has required children’s service delivery to be redesigned to
attend to infant mental health across all four tiers of NHS provision through inter-
agency networks of child-care professionals. The policy identifies child-care social
workers as primary care professionals, able to recognize early infant mental health pro-
blems, promote mental health and prevent deterioration. Our paper explores whether,
as a profession, English child-care social workers are well prepared in terms of their
knowledge, ideological beliefs and professional acculturation to implement such
changes to their practice. Empirical information is provided from a funded, independent
evaluation of the implementation of the NSF policy at a local level. Data from pro-
fessional focus group interviews describe and compare the differing professional ideologies and professional practice preferences within the infant mental health
network of an English NHS Primary Care Trust in an urban local authority. The findings
identified obstacles that were personal–ideological, cultural and structural in nature.
Progress towards achieving the NSF policy standards appeared slight.
AB - Infancy is a crucial time for interventions to reduce later developmental difficulties. In
England, recent policy has required children’s service delivery to be redesigned to
attend to infant mental health across all four tiers of NHS provision through inter-
agency networks of child-care professionals. The policy identifies child-care social
workers as primary care professionals, able to recognize early infant mental health pro-
blems, promote mental health and prevent deterioration. Our paper explores whether,
as a profession, English child-care social workers are well prepared in terms of their
knowledge, ideological beliefs and professional acculturation to implement such
changes to their practice. Empirical information is provided from a funded, independent
evaluation of the implementation of the NSF policy at a local level. Data from pro-
fessional focus group interviews describe and compare the differing professional ideologies and professional practice preferences within the infant mental health
network of an English NHS Primary Care Trust in an urban local authority. The findings
identified obstacles that were personal–ideological, cultural and structural in nature.
Progress towards achieving the NSF policy standards appeared slight.
U2 - 10.1093/bjsw/bcn029
DO - 10.1093/bjsw/bcn029
M3 - Article
SN - 0045-3102
VL - 39
SP - 1008
EP - 1025
JO - British Journal of Social Work
JF - British Journal of Social Work
IS - 0
ER -