Abstract
Across various welfare and justice systems, intensive key worker support is a model of working considered effective for individuals and families identified as having multiple and complex needs. The high profile ‘troubled families’ programme in England is the most recent prominent example of such a model. The key worker role is to assess an individual’s needs, carry out support planning, provide and/or co-ordinate the delivery of supportive interventions and complete care plan reviews. This requires the key worker to work on a one-to-one basis with individuals which, in turn, demands the ability to form effective relationships. In this paper and using evidence from a number of studies, I look at how the key worker-client relationship is developed and maintained. I examine the skills, processes and communication strategies that allow key workers to engage clients, build relationships and drive change. I also explore the notion that the key worker-service user relationship is itself a ‘therapeutic’ medium and is therefore a productive practice in its own right. The paper suggests that while key workers might not be trained therapists or counsellors, they might be equipped to address some emotional challenges that individuals with complex needs face and build therapeutic relationships with them.
Notes
1 I have used the term ‘key worker’ to refer to comparable non-professional occupational roles but locally the position might be referred to as support worker, family intervention worker or Intensive Outreach Worker.
2 These terms are often used interchangeably.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Sadie Parr
Sadie Parr is a research fellow at the Centre for Regional, Economic and Social Research, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, United Kingdom. [email: [email protected]]