Practitioners’ Documentation of Assessment and Care Planning in Social Care: The Opportunities for Organizational Learning

Posted: 29 Jul 2009

See all articles by Michele Foster

Michele Foster

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Jennifer Harris

University of Dundee

Caroline Glendinning

University of York - Department of Social Policy and Social Work

Karen Jackson

University of York

Abstract

This paper analyses practitioners’ documentation of social care assessments and care plans for disabled adults of working age. The data were collected in the course of an innovative project that introduced new outcome-focused documentation into routine social care assessment, care management and review processes. The project aimed to encourage practitioners to focus during these processes on the full range of outcomes that individual disabled adults might seek to achieve; and identify the appropriate services for realizing those outcomes. Analysis of the new documentation provides insights into the diverse range of priorities and outcomes that service users aspire to achieve as a result of receiving services, and the service inputs that were agreed between practitioners and service users. However, despite the new documentation, the majority of both outcomes and services that were recorded tended to cluster around a fairly narrow range of conventional social care service functions. Moreover, the emphasis of both outcomes and service inputs differed between different groups of social care professionals. In the context of current policies to make social care services more individualized and outcome-focused, each of these findings has major organizational implications. The opportunities for using routine practitioner documentation to identify areas of organizational and professional change and learning are discussed.

Keywords: social care, outcome-focused services, disabled adults

Suggested Citation

Foster, Michele and Harris, Jennifer and Glendinning, Caroline and Jackson, Karen, Practitioners’ Documentation of Assessment and Care Planning in Social Care: The Opportunities for Organizational Learning. British Journal of Social Work, Vol. 38, Issue 3, pp. 546-560, 2008, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1438868 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcl366

Michele Foster (Contact Author)

affiliation not provided to SSRN

No Address Available

Jennifer Harris

University of Dundee

Dundee, Scotland DD1 4HN
United Kingdom

Caroline Glendinning

University of York - Department of Social Policy and Social Work ( email )

Heslington
York YO 10 5DD
United Kingdom

Karen Jackson

University of York

Heslington
University of York
York, YO10 5DD
United Kingdom

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