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Helping the helpers: Post‐traumatic distress and need for help among Israeli social workers in foster care agencies following armed conflict
Authors:Miriam Schiff PhD  Rachel Dekel PhD  Ohad Gilbar MSW  Rami Benbenishty PhD
Institution:1. Paul Baerwald School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel;2. The Louis and Gabi Weisfeld School of Social Work, Bar‐Ilan University, Ramat‐Gan, Israel
Abstract:This study examined the associations between exposure to armed conflict, perceived support, work experience, needing help, and post‐traumatic distress among Israeli social workers in foster care agencies based on Conservation of Resources theory. The study used a mixed‐methods design. Six months after the end of an armed conflict, 82 social workers responded to a web‐based questionnaire with closed‐ and open‐ended questions. Results showed that exposure to the armed conflict was moderately associated with post‐traumatic stress symptoms and functional impairment. Only the workers' perceived need for personal help (but not help for professional matters) was positively associated with their psychological distress. The qualitative analysis suggests that social workers showed strengths and wanted help mainly to improve their professional skills. Yet they also elaborated on the complexities involved in conducting their professional work, especially home visits, because such visits put their own lives in danger and meant deserting their own families. Practice implications are as follows: Foster care agencies should make greater efforts to provide knowledge and skills, support, supervision, and a “safe haven” for their workers, in the context of armed conflict.
Keywords:armed conflict  foster care  needing help  PTSD  shared trauma  social workers
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