Abstract

Social workers are struggling within their professional and personal lives. Many clinical social workers who work in the mental health and medical field are struggling with poor health behaviors, secondary traumatic stress (STS), depression, anxiety, and burnout due to staff shortages, rapid turnover, compassion fatigue, and poor staff recruitment (Toh et al., 2018). Untreated trauma related to bereavement issues can result in PTSD and complicated grief symptoms in clinical populations when left untreated by a trained mental health clinician (Glad et al., 2022). Social work clinicians can expect therapeutic encounters to include discussions of deaths, loss, and reduced security contributing to negative mental health occurrences as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Social workers who work with families and individuals who are experiencing trauma are often adversely affected by these interactions, resulting in negative outcomes for the social worker (Caringi et al., 2017). A recent study of the COVID-19 pandemic and related mental health issues found an increase in anxiety and mental health issues related to stress, grief, fear, and depression (Estes & Thompson, 2020). Many social work clinicians may require mental health treatment of their own COVID-19 experiences, while simultaneously developing vicarious trauma (VT) and countertransference issues as a result of working with a clinical population in the treatment setting.

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