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Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014

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Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014. / Tucker, Sue; Hargreaves, Claire; Roberts, Amy et al.
In: The British Journal of Social Work, Vol. 48, No. 6, 27.10.2017, p. 1627-1644.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Tucker, S, Hargreaves, C, Roberts, A, Anderson, I, shaw, J & Challis, D 2017, 'Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014', The British Journal of Social Work, vol. 48, no. 6, pp. 1627-1644. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcx115

APA

Tucker, S., Hargreaves, C., Roberts, A., Anderson, I., shaw, J., & Challis, D. (2017). Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014. The British Journal of Social Work, 48(6), 1627-1644. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcx115

Vancouver

Tucker S, Hargreaves C, Roberts A, Anderson I, shaw J, Challis D. Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014. The British Journal of Social Work. 2017 Oct 27;48(6):1627-1644. doi: 10.1093/bjsw/bcx115

Author

Tucker, Sue ; Hargreaves, Claire ; Roberts, Amy et al. / Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014. In: The British Journal of Social Work. 2017 ; Vol. 48, No. 6. pp. 1627-1644.

Bibtex

@article{4b2df3a238b244fcbbb4285deec640cc,
title = "Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014",
abstract = "Despite an obvious and growing need, there has historically been scant provision of social care and social work in prisons. Thus although the 2014 Care Act gave local authorities in England responsibility for identifying, assessing and meeting adult prisoners{\textquoteright} social care needs, little was known about the number of prisoners eligible for support, the extent of their needs or how best to meet them. Against this background, this paper reports the findings of two national surveys of local authority managers undertaken in 2016 which found that upwards of 1,800 prisoners with social care needs were identified in the first year, of whom almost 1,600 received an assessment and approaching 800 were deemed eligible for the provision of care and support. Whilst specialist social care staff (primarily social workers) were widely engaged in prisoner assessments, many local authorities had delegated their responsibility for identifying prisoners with social care needs to prison healthcare staff, and there was considerable variation in the way that social care and support were delivered. A number of implications for social work practice and research were identified, including a need for greater active case finding and further evaluation of the impact of the emerging arrangements on prisoners{\textquoteright} outcomes.",
author = "Sue Tucker and Claire Hargreaves and Amy Roberts and Ian Anderson and jennifer shaw and David Challis",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1093/bjsw/bcx115",
language = "English",
volume = "48",
pages = "1627--1644",
journal = "The British Journal of Social Work",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social care in prison: Emerging practice arrangements consequent upon the introduction of the Care Act 2014

AU - Tucker, Sue

AU - Hargreaves, Claire

AU - Roberts, Amy

AU - Anderson, Ian

AU - shaw, jennifer

AU - Challis, David

PY - 2017/10/27

Y1 - 2017/10/27

N2 - Despite an obvious and growing need, there has historically been scant provision of social care and social work in prisons. Thus although the 2014 Care Act gave local authorities in England responsibility for identifying, assessing and meeting adult prisoners’ social care needs, little was known about the number of prisoners eligible for support, the extent of their needs or how best to meet them. Against this background, this paper reports the findings of two national surveys of local authority managers undertaken in 2016 which found that upwards of 1,800 prisoners with social care needs were identified in the first year, of whom almost 1,600 received an assessment and approaching 800 were deemed eligible for the provision of care and support. Whilst specialist social care staff (primarily social workers) were widely engaged in prisoner assessments, many local authorities had delegated their responsibility for identifying prisoners with social care needs to prison healthcare staff, and there was considerable variation in the way that social care and support were delivered. A number of implications for social work practice and research were identified, including a need for greater active case finding and further evaluation of the impact of the emerging arrangements on prisoners’ outcomes.

AB - Despite an obvious and growing need, there has historically been scant provision of social care and social work in prisons. Thus although the 2014 Care Act gave local authorities in England responsibility for identifying, assessing and meeting adult prisoners’ social care needs, little was known about the number of prisoners eligible for support, the extent of their needs or how best to meet them. Against this background, this paper reports the findings of two national surveys of local authority managers undertaken in 2016 which found that upwards of 1,800 prisoners with social care needs were identified in the first year, of whom almost 1,600 received an assessment and approaching 800 were deemed eligible for the provision of care and support. Whilst specialist social care staff (primarily social workers) were widely engaged in prisoner assessments, many local authorities had delegated their responsibility for identifying prisoners with social care needs to prison healthcare staff, and there was considerable variation in the way that social care and support were delivered. A number of implications for social work practice and research were identified, including a need for greater active case finding and further evaluation of the impact of the emerging arrangements on prisoners’ outcomes.

U2 - 10.1093/bjsw/bcx115

DO - 10.1093/bjsw/bcx115

M3 - Journal article

VL - 48

SP - 1627

EP - 1644

JO - The British Journal of Social Work

JF - The British Journal of Social Work

IS - 6

ER -