Login / Signup

Is Self-Care a Stand-In for Feminized Social Privilege? A Systematic Review of Self-Care Facilitators and Barriers to Self-Care Practices in Social Work.

Lauren BarksCatherine E BurnetteKristi Ka'apuCharles R Figley
Published in: Journal of evidence-based social work (2019) (2023)
Overwhelmingly, results indicated social workers reporting greater sociostructural, economic, professional, and physical health privilege engaged in more self-care. No articles directly assessed institutional factors that may drive distress among social workers and clients. Rather, self-care was framed as a personal responsibility without integration of feminized and racialized inequities in a sociopolitical and historical context. Such framings may replicate rather than redress unsustainable inequities experienced by social workers and clients.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • public health
  • physical activity
  • emergency department
  • hiv testing
  • climate change
  • social media
  • hiv infected
  • human health