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Original Articles

A Qualitative Study of MSW Student Self-Care and Wellness: Implications for Social Work Education

Pages 1108-1124 | Accepted 13 Jan 2022, Published online: 17 May 2022
 

ABSTRACT

This qualitative study explored MSW students’ perceived facilitators and barriers to self-care. Research suggests MSW students experience high stress from heavy course workloads, internship, and exposure to human suffering. MSW students report difficulty engaging in self-care, even when provided by their programs. Hence, it is important to gain insights into what promotes and prohibits MSW student self-care. MSW students participated in four semi-structured focus groups (N = 27, x– age = 27.8 years, 85.2% female, 55.6% white, 44.4% students of color). Analysis followed a combination of constant comparison and template analysis. Five themes underscore barriers and facilitators to self-care. Findings suggest importance of fostering a culture of self-care in MSW programs and assisting students to alter cognitive roadblocks to self-care.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Nicole Nicotera

Nicole Nicotera, PhD, is at University of Denver. Tyler M. Han, MSW, is at University of Denver. Jen Sedivy, MSW, is at University of Denver. Joshua Andelora, MSW, is at University of Denver.

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