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workforce Social workers likely to lead joint teams

Posted: 11 December 2003 | Subscribe Online


Fears that social work might become dominated by health and education professionals once the children's green paper is implemented have been dismissed by the chief executive of the General Social Care Council.

Lynne Berry told delegates at a conference in Birmingham last week that social workers should not look upon the future of children's services as a "frightening world" in which their role would be taken over.

Instead, it was more likely that social workers would be in the strongest position to lead multi-disciplinary teams because of their past experience of doing so, she said.
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Berry added that social workers were admired and respected by their colleagues in health and education and that the future was "very bright for social workers".

On the training proposals in the green paper, Berry said that while the GSCC believed common knowledge and a set of shared skills for people working with children made sense, it did not support plans for a common qualification.
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Such a move would destroy specialist skills, she said, adding that the GSCC was considering creating advanced skills social workers.

Earlier, academic Bob Holman described the green paper as "disappointing" because it dealt with large-scale reorganisation but ignored families living in deprived areas.


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