Revisiting the biological perspective in the use of biopsychosocial assessments in social work |
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Authors: | Abigail Burns Erin Dannecker |
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Affiliation: | Mack Center, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() ABSTRACTThe call for increased attention to the biopsychosocial perspective in social work practice is now decades old in the USA. And yet the challenge of teaching and learning from this perspective for those with limited background in biology calls for more inter-disciplinary examples to assist students with the process of engaging in theory-informed practice. In addition to identifying the key elements of human biology, this review of the literature focuses on four examples of client behaviors that receive little or no attention in most current textbooks on the inter-disciplinary nature of human behavior in the social environment; namely, the psychobiology of sleep, the sociobiology of eating, the neurobiology of post-partum depression, and the behavioral endocrinology of menopause. This review concludes with implications for practice. |
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Keywords: | Psychobiology of sleep sociobiology of eating neurobiology of post-partum depression behavioral endocrinology of menopause |
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