2018
DOI: 10.1177/0886260518812792
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Client-Perpetrated Violence Among Frontline Child Welfare Workers

Abstract: Client-perpetrated violence against child protective services (CPS) workers is common and detrimental to worker wellbeing with consequences including physical injury and psychological illnesses. Despite the impacts of violence, few studies capture violence in a representative sample of CPS workers. This study examines prevalence and applies a structural inequality framework to consider who among CPS workers is most susceptible. This article used the Florida Study of Professionals for Safe Families dataset, a l… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Thus, workplace safety culture and professional roles influence how social workers perceive and react to client violence. For example, Swedish and international studies indicate that workplace culture in social work agencies tends to promote normalization of, and tolerance towards client violence (Radey and Wilke 2018;Zelnick et al 2013). However, when the client violence occurs in the private sphere, the social workers' repertoire for understanding and dealing with the violence seems insufficient.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thus, workplace safety culture and professional roles influence how social workers perceive and react to client violence. For example, Swedish and international studies indicate that workplace culture in social work agencies tends to promote normalization of, and tolerance towards client violence (Radey and Wilke 2018;Zelnick et al 2013). However, when the client violence occurs in the private sphere, the social workers' repertoire for understanding and dealing with the violence seems insufficient.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies from other Nordic countries like Finland show that social workers are among the high-risk professionals for service-user related violence (Heiskanen 2007). Correspondingly, high international prevalence rates have been reported, ranging between 52% and 80% in countries like Australia (Koritsas, Coles, and Boyle 2010), Canada (Macdonald and Sirotich 2005), the UK (Littlechild et al 2016) and the USA (Radey and Wilke 2018;Zelnick et al 2013).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accumulating evidence, typically from convenience samples, suggests high rates of various types of CPV among CPS workers. Analysis of the only known statewide sample of CPS workers ( N = 1,162) indicates that CPS workers experienced high rates of CPV within the first 2 years on the job, including nonphysical violence (75%), threats (37%), and physical violence (2%; Radey & Wilke, in press). Although estimates vary widely due to question wording and time frame, convenience studies have found similar rates such that a sizable segment of the CPS workforce encounters verbal assaults (37%–97%), threats of physical violence (11%–33%), and physical attacks (2%–34%; Horejsi et al, 1994; Ringstad, 2009; Robson et al, 2014).…”
Section: Prevalence Of Cpvmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Violence and threats from social service users towards social workers (client violence) in workrelated contexts is a problem in Sweden and internationally (Enosh and Tzafrir 2015;Koritsas, Coles, and Boyle 2010;Macdonald and Sirotich 2005;Padyab and Ghazinour 2015;Radey and Wilke 2018;Shin 2011;Swedish Work Environment Authority 2018;Zelnick et al 2013). Client violence may involve physical assault, verbal harassment, property damage, or threats in conjunction with, or as a result of social workers' execution of their job (Waddington, Badger, and Bull 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Violence and its use are socially constructed, and therefore understood and reacted to in different ways depending on the context (Stanko 2003). In social service organizations in Sweden and internationally, there exists a notion that client violence is part of the job (Radey and Wilke 2018;Spencer and Munch 2003;Swedish Work Environment Authority 2018;Zelnick et al 2013). Social workers struggle to accept this notion, well aware of the looming and undesirable effects of violence.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%