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Code Of Ethics: The Social Work Career

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The social work career comes with core values and ethics that one must abide by. These different values and ethics can be found within the NASW code of ethics. These six core values serve as the groundwork of social work and they are service, social justice, dignity, and worth of the person, importance of human relationships, integrity and competence. (NASW, 2008).
Code of Ethics The National Association Code of Ethics gives an understanding of these six core values and what they mean to social work. Service means putting the needs of others above your own without expecting a significant return for the work. Social justice means working to improve the lives of people who deal with problems such as poverty and unemployment along with a number …show more content…

Many people are so quick to judge others based on their situation and to blame the victims. Lauren Wolfe, from the website Woman under Siege talks about victim blaming and why it needs to stop. She writes in her article about woman being raped and people automatically making comments such as “she was asking for it”, “she shouldn’t have been walking alone” and even one girl being called a whore and that it was her fault for the rape (Lauren Wolfe 2012). This is only one example of victim blaming but it is certainly not the only place it takes place. We see this in domestic violence cases, drug abuse cases, people who have fallen homeless, along with many other unfortunate events. Therefore, for me the core value Dignity and worth of a person means standing up for victims. It means truly believing nobody is at fault for where they have fallen. It means believing every person is important and deserves to feel dignity and …show more content…

The code of ethics goes over many situations and for good reason. It is not possible to be a social worker and not have to deal with a situation that will require a person to look at the code of ethics. MSW Guide gives different dilemmas and helps in going through how to solve these dilemmas. One example it gives is what you would do if a client of yours sent you a request on social media. The first thing I would personally think to do Is to automatically reject it and avoid that outside relationship with the client. Then the article brings up how big of a role social media plays in our lives today, and how a client may feel rejected and hurt by the rejection. To gain a better understanding of what the right thing to do in this situation, they would need to look at the code of ethics. This dilemma deals with the social worker and the client, so the solution would be somewhere in the 1.0s codes. 1.06 c talks about how the social worker should not engage in multiple relationships with a client (NASW, 2008). Although it says if there is a risk of harm not to engage in multiple relationships, I would avoid any relationship other than social worker/client despite if it would cause harm or

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