
Clinical Social Worker/LICSW/South Shore Hospital
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, South Weymouth, MA, United States
Overview
Provides clinical psychosocial intervention, including crisis intervention, individual, couples and family counseling, support groups, and short-term bereavement therapy. Coordinates patient care through the continuum, facilitating the achievement of optimal quality outcomes in relation to clinical care and cost-effectiveness. Collaborates with multidisciplinary team of oncologist, APP, Oncology Nurse Navigator, primary infusion RN, surgeons, radiation oncologists, resource navigators and collaterals to achieve optimal patient care from pre-diagnosis through treatment, survivorship and/or end of life. This is for all disease groups.
Location related information and organizational statements have been removed to focus on job responsibilities and requirements.
Provides biopsychosocial assessment and intervention, crisis intervention, coordination of psychosocial services, and consultation, to reduce cancer-related distress and improve quality of life for patients, families, and caregivers across the trajectory of cancer care; this includes those patients seen for screening for high risk of developing cancer and/or a diagnosis of cancer through to end of life and/or survivorship in collaboration with community mental health partners.
Provides social work intervention to assist patients/families: Responsible for evidence-based facilitation or patient and/or family and/or caregiver support programs or groups area. Demonstrates ability to form empathic relationships with patients/families who have significant emotional adjustment issues. Demonstrates ability to use self in differential, therapeutic ways to address patient/family concerns, problems, issues to achieve optimal functioning. Maintains working knowledge base of techniques for individual, couples, family and group counseling. Assesses adaption of families and caregivers to patient's illness and ensures maximum participation of patients/families/caregivers in the continuum of care process. Responsible for facilitating complex serious illness and goals of care conversations to ensure shared treatment decision-making and effective patient-physician communication.
Provides clinical interventions that are focused on cancer-related distress, are evidence based, goal oriented, strengths based, and short-term and episodic in nature to ensure patient equity and accessibility to social work interventions; modalities include individual, family, and group work.
Provides in-person and/or telehealth services to patients and families/caregivers; method of communication (i.e., in person/phone/Zoom video) is based on clinical assessment.
Completes appropriate evidence-based assessments including Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, PHQ-9, and GAD-7 for each patient so as to inform appropriate and clinical response.
Assumes responsibility/leadership as needed: Ability to cover for supervisory personnel as needed. Ability to make reasoned decisions and provide organization and leadership as needed.
Assists health care team to integrate psychosocial factors: Ability to analyze significant psychological, physical, emotional, social, economic issues of patients/families and to effectively communicate the relevance of such to other health care providers. Ability to identify, analyze and suggest intervention for difficult patient/family management situations. Communicates clinical assessment and recommendations and provides consultation and support to interdisciplinary health care team. Initiates collaboration with interdisciplinary team to manage psychosocial barriers that limit patients’/families’/caregivers’ ability to access and/or engage in recommended medical care.
Provides education/consultation regarding impact of cancer on patients and families/caregivers to community, and provides consultation, education, and program development (e.g., support groups, psychoeducational forums, etc.) within the disease-based or service-based team and in collaboration with the interdisciplinary team. Education also includes offering facilitation of palliative care and hospice transitions
Responsible for evidence-based facilitation of patient and/or family and/or caregiver support programs or groups area.
Serves as liaison and collaborates with range of community and governmental agencies and resources: Maintains current knowledge of community and governmental resources. Ability to advocate for and obtain access to resources for patients/families. Ability to identify deficits in resources and to advocate for new resources.
Communicate and collaborate with inpatient Palliative Care Team at South Shore Hospital including warm handoffs, intervention assistance, and continuing patient and family support.
Demonstrates commitment to continuous improvement by seeking ways of improving care, effectiveness and efficiency within the department and within the organization. This includes participation in strategic planning for SW department, participation in consult services and programmatic councils to address needs within the institute and for our patients.
Demonstrates flexibility, willingness to innovate, seek new models of care and collaboration.
Demonstrates commitment to cultural sensitivity and cultural competence with diverse populations. Responsible for demonstrating commitment to diversity and equity efforts, including advocacy and self-education to advance knowledge base of the needs and concerns of underserved and marginalized populations.
Responsible for identifying and communicating systemic inequities, their impact on patients, families, caregivers and the community at large and providing recommendations for systemic change.
Documents clinical work. Maintains ability to clearly articulate in writing psychosocial assessments and social work plans of action. Ability to adhere to department standards for timely documentation. Administer and maintain administrative record-keeping, statistical reports: Ability to adhere to department standards for timely reporting of statistics.
Participates in department meetings and institutional committees: Attends department meetings consistently and promptly. Provides leadership in committee work and meetings (e.g. QI, staff development).
Participates in Supportive Oncology Collaborative meeting weekly with multidisciplinary support team of psychiatry, psychology, palliative care, and social work. The social worker is the primary clinician in the SOC model. Social work performs assessments on all patients referred to SOC. Key components of that assessment include: PHQ-9, GAD-7, Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, and the Serious Illness Conversation. Social work carries out most of the behavioral health interventions in SOC. During weekly SOC team meetings, social work presents patients that have complicated needs/presentations, patients with PHQ and GAD scores of over 10, patients with referral reasons related to substance use disorders (SUDs), serious mental illness (SMI), and early palliative care referrals
Participates in weekly medical oncology rounds for each medical provider so as to collaborate and coordinate care for patients and families—this includes providing communicating clinical assessment and recommendations, consultation and support to interdisciplinary health care team.
Formulates, coordinates, implements psychosocial component of patient/family care: Demonstrates ability to clarify on short and long-term goals with patients/families around psychological, emotional, physical, social, environmental, and economic/financial issues impacting patients’ adjustments and recoveries.
Initiates and/or participates in interdisciplinary collaboration to implement psychosocial treatment: Ability to initiate and facilitate interdisciplinary meetings to discuss and/or implement psychosocial care plan. Skilled in ability to communicate effectively with multidisciplinary team within and outside DF/BWH Cancer Center at South Shore Hospital. Demonstrates understanding of the principles of multi-disciplinary team collaboration and maintains effective working relationships.
On call coverage once per week during work hours offering acute interventions for patients who are dysregulated, suicidal, or with other concerning behaviors. This includes completing suicide assessments and facilitating section to higher LOC, filing safety reports, and facilitating/contributing to safety meetings with care team and appropriate collaborators.
Participates in interdepartmental / Institute planning regarding program, policy, procedures: Awareness of adherence to institutional policies and procedures. Ability to work effectively to contribute to development and review of department and interdepartmental policies and procedures and regulatory requirements (e.g. mandated reporting, QI program).
Teaches and supervises social work staff graduate trainees, volunteers: Ability to transmit knowledge of social work principles in an oncology setting and psychosocial issues for patients/families to others for the purpose of teaching and supervision.
Delivers presentations and seminars to community at large: Organizes and effectively presents psychosocial issues for cancer patients/families. Maintains current knowledge base on social work principles and interventions in an oncology setting.
Participates in psychosocial research: Identifies important areas for psychosocial research. Maintains working knowledge of principles of research. Ability to initiate, develop and participate in psychosocial research projects. Ability to prioritize time to ensure participation in research projects.
Seeks consultation as needed.
Job Requirements
Minimum Education
- Masters Degree in Social Work from accredited program. Current Massachusetts license required.
Minimum Work Experience
Previous experience in hospital or healthcare setting.
Required Licenses / Registrations
LCSW or LICSW - Licensed Clinical Social Worker OR Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker
Required Skills Knowledge, and Abilities
Bilingual English / Spanish preferred.
Cultural sensitivity and age specific competency required.
Crisis intervention, treatment skills.
Strong clinical assessment/judgment, including interdisciplinary teaming skills.
Excellent communication oral and written.
Strong organizational skills and ability to set priorities; tolerance for ambiguity.
Analytical skills, computer literacy and keyboarding.
Knowledge of interventions for patients with psychosocial needs inclusive of mental health, behavioral health, emotional, relational, and other social needs.
Knowledge of various behavioral health interventions related to common issues and needs across the oncology continuum of care.
Knowledge of interdisciplinary teamwork and team dynamics, scope of key partnerships and interprofessional roles.
Knowledge of social work clinical psychosocial care concepts, practices, and policies with demonstrated ability to use them in varied situations; may require clinical consultation to plan and implement in complex situations.
Ability to facilitate understanding and resolution of problems related to patient/family/caregiver interpersonal conflict, mental health and/or substance use concerns or disorders.
Ability to provide guidance/ consultation to the team around complex patient management, including ethical issues; may require clinical consultation to plan and implement in complex situations.
Ability to facilitate patient and family/caregiver participation in oncology care, with ability to recommend and contribute to team and/or family/caregiver meetings.
Ability to make clinical decisions guided by experience, policies, consultation, and evidence-based practice.
Ability to actively participate in team meetings related to care planning in the setting of disruptive/challenging patient/family/caregiver support person behavior.
Ability to understand and communicate information to interdisciplinary team, patients, families, caregivers, and community partners (e.g., agencies, professional organizations, etc.).
Ability to be sensitive, responsive to, and advocate for the needs of diverse populations in the setting of serious illness; including diversity in gender identity, age, culture, race, religion, socioeconomic status, abilities, and sexual orientation.
Ability to adjust to change within a fast-paced working environment.
Ability to integrate professional ethical principles (e.g., confidentiality, boundaries) and adhere to relevant professional, departmental, and organizational standards for patient and family care.
Ability to write clear and complete biopsychosocial assessments, progress notes, and other forms of documentation in the EMR, keeping with Divisional and Institutional policies.
Adheres to Social Work Division practice and administrative standards and policies (e.g., HIPAA, high-risk sign out, scheduling).
Position Schedule: Monday through Friday 8:30am - 5:00pm. This a hybrid position, 3 days onsite and 2 days remote.
South Shore Hospital Compensation Pay Range: $79,830.40 - $107,432.00
EEO and Compliance
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute is an equal opportunity employer and affirms the right of every qualified applicant to receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, gender identity or expression, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, age, ancestry, military service, protected veteran status, or other characteristics protected by law.
Pay Transparency Statement: The hiring range is based on market pay structures, with individual salaries determined by factors such as business needs, market conditions, internal equity, and based on the candidate’s relevant experience, skills and qualifications. For union positions, the pay range is determined by the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA).
#J-18808-Ljbffr
Provides clinical psychosocial intervention, including crisis intervention, individual, couples and family counseling, support groups, and short-term bereavement therapy. Coordinates patient care through the continuum, facilitating the achievement of optimal quality outcomes in relation to clinical care and cost-effectiveness. Collaborates with multidisciplinary team of oncologist, APP, Oncology Nurse Navigator, primary infusion RN, surgeons, radiation oncologists, resource navigators and collaterals to achieve optimal patient care from pre-diagnosis through treatment, survivorship and/or end of life. This is for all disease groups.
Location related information and organizational statements have been removed to focus on job responsibilities and requirements.
Provides biopsychosocial assessment and intervention, crisis intervention, coordination of psychosocial services, and consultation, to reduce cancer-related distress and improve quality of life for patients, families, and caregivers across the trajectory of cancer care; this includes those patients seen for screening for high risk of developing cancer and/or a diagnosis of cancer through to end of life and/or survivorship in collaboration with community mental health partners.
Provides social work intervention to assist patients/families: Responsible for evidence-based facilitation or patient and/or family and/or caregiver support programs or groups area. Demonstrates ability to form empathic relationships with patients/families who have significant emotional adjustment issues. Demonstrates ability to use self in differential, therapeutic ways to address patient/family concerns, problems, issues to achieve optimal functioning. Maintains working knowledge base of techniques for individual, couples, family and group counseling. Assesses adaption of families and caregivers to patient's illness and ensures maximum participation of patients/families/caregivers in the continuum of care process. Responsible for facilitating complex serious illness and goals of care conversations to ensure shared treatment decision-making and effective patient-physician communication.
Provides clinical interventions that are focused on cancer-related distress, are evidence based, goal oriented, strengths based, and short-term and episodic in nature to ensure patient equity and accessibility to social work interventions; modalities include individual, family, and group work.
Provides in-person and/or telehealth services to patients and families/caregivers; method of communication (i.e., in person/phone/Zoom video) is based on clinical assessment.
Completes appropriate evidence-based assessments including Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, PHQ-9, and GAD-7 for each patient so as to inform appropriate and clinical response.
Assumes responsibility/leadership as needed: Ability to cover for supervisory personnel as needed. Ability to make reasoned decisions and provide organization and leadership as needed.
Assists health care team to integrate psychosocial factors: Ability to analyze significant psychological, physical, emotional, social, economic issues of patients/families and to effectively communicate the relevance of such to other health care providers. Ability to identify, analyze and suggest intervention for difficult patient/family management situations. Communicates clinical assessment and recommendations and provides consultation and support to interdisciplinary health care team. Initiates collaboration with interdisciplinary team to manage psychosocial barriers that limit patients’/families’/caregivers’ ability to access and/or engage in recommended medical care.
Provides education/consultation regarding impact of cancer on patients and families/caregivers to community, and provides consultation, education, and program development (e.g., support groups, psychoeducational forums, etc.) within the disease-based or service-based team and in collaboration with the interdisciplinary team. Education also includes offering facilitation of palliative care and hospice transitions
Responsible for evidence-based facilitation of patient and/or family and/or caregiver support programs or groups area.
Serves as liaison and collaborates with range of community and governmental agencies and resources: Maintains current knowledge of community and governmental resources. Ability to advocate for and obtain access to resources for patients/families. Ability to identify deficits in resources and to advocate for new resources.
Communicate and collaborate with inpatient Palliative Care Team at South Shore Hospital including warm handoffs, intervention assistance, and continuing patient and family support.
Demonstrates commitment to continuous improvement by seeking ways of improving care, effectiveness and efficiency within the department and within the organization. This includes participation in strategic planning for SW department, participation in consult services and programmatic councils to address needs within the institute and for our patients.
Demonstrates flexibility, willingness to innovate, seek new models of care and collaboration.
Demonstrates commitment to cultural sensitivity and cultural competence with diverse populations. Responsible for demonstrating commitment to diversity and equity efforts, including advocacy and self-education to advance knowledge base of the needs and concerns of underserved and marginalized populations.
Responsible for identifying and communicating systemic inequities, their impact on patients, families, caregivers and the community at large and providing recommendations for systemic change.
Documents clinical work. Maintains ability to clearly articulate in writing psychosocial assessments and social work plans of action. Ability to adhere to department standards for timely documentation. Administer and maintain administrative record-keeping, statistical reports: Ability to adhere to department standards for timely reporting of statistics.
Participates in department meetings and institutional committees: Attends department meetings consistently and promptly. Provides leadership in committee work and meetings (e.g. QI, staff development).
Participates in Supportive Oncology Collaborative meeting weekly with multidisciplinary support team of psychiatry, psychology, palliative care, and social work. The social worker is the primary clinician in the SOC model. Social work performs assessments on all patients referred to SOC. Key components of that assessment include: PHQ-9, GAD-7, Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, and the Serious Illness Conversation. Social work carries out most of the behavioral health interventions in SOC. During weekly SOC team meetings, social work presents patients that have complicated needs/presentations, patients with PHQ and GAD scores of over 10, patients with referral reasons related to substance use disorders (SUDs), serious mental illness (SMI), and early palliative care referrals
Participates in weekly medical oncology rounds for each medical provider so as to collaborate and coordinate care for patients and families—this includes providing communicating clinical assessment and recommendations, consultation and support to interdisciplinary health care team.
Formulates, coordinates, implements psychosocial component of patient/family care: Demonstrates ability to clarify on short and long-term goals with patients/families around psychological, emotional, physical, social, environmental, and economic/financial issues impacting patients’ adjustments and recoveries.
Initiates and/or participates in interdisciplinary collaboration to implement psychosocial treatment: Ability to initiate and facilitate interdisciplinary meetings to discuss and/or implement psychosocial care plan. Skilled in ability to communicate effectively with multidisciplinary team within and outside DF/BWH Cancer Center at South Shore Hospital. Demonstrates understanding of the principles of multi-disciplinary team collaboration and maintains effective working relationships.
On call coverage once per week during work hours offering acute interventions for patients who are dysregulated, suicidal, or with other concerning behaviors. This includes completing suicide assessments and facilitating section to higher LOC, filing safety reports, and facilitating/contributing to safety meetings with care team and appropriate collaborators.
Participates in interdepartmental / Institute planning regarding program, policy, procedures: Awareness of adherence to institutional policies and procedures. Ability to work effectively to contribute to development and review of department and interdepartmental policies and procedures and regulatory requirements (e.g. mandated reporting, QI program).
Teaches and supervises social work staff graduate trainees, volunteers: Ability to transmit knowledge of social work principles in an oncology setting and psychosocial issues for patients/families to others for the purpose of teaching and supervision.
Delivers presentations and seminars to community at large: Organizes and effectively presents psychosocial issues for cancer patients/families. Maintains current knowledge base on social work principles and interventions in an oncology setting.
Participates in psychosocial research: Identifies important areas for psychosocial research. Maintains working knowledge of principles of research. Ability to initiate, develop and participate in psychosocial research projects. Ability to prioritize time to ensure participation in research projects.
Seeks consultation as needed.
Job Requirements
Minimum Education
- Masters Degree in Social Work from accredited program. Current Massachusetts license required.
Minimum Work Experience
Previous experience in hospital or healthcare setting.
Required Licenses / Registrations
LCSW or LICSW - Licensed Clinical Social Worker OR Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker
Required Skills Knowledge, and Abilities
Bilingual English / Spanish preferred.
Cultural sensitivity and age specific competency required.
Crisis intervention, treatment skills.
Strong clinical assessment/judgment, including interdisciplinary teaming skills.
Excellent communication oral and written.
Strong organizational skills and ability to set priorities; tolerance for ambiguity.
Analytical skills, computer literacy and keyboarding.
Knowledge of interventions for patients with psychosocial needs inclusive of mental health, behavioral health, emotional, relational, and other social needs.
Knowledge of various behavioral health interventions related to common issues and needs across the oncology continuum of care.
Knowledge of interdisciplinary teamwork and team dynamics, scope of key partnerships and interprofessional roles.
Knowledge of social work clinical psychosocial care concepts, practices, and policies with demonstrated ability to use them in varied situations; may require clinical consultation to plan and implement in complex situations.
Ability to facilitate understanding and resolution of problems related to patient/family/caregiver interpersonal conflict, mental health and/or substance use concerns or disorders.
Ability to provide guidance/ consultation to the team around complex patient management, including ethical issues; may require clinical consultation to plan and implement in complex situations.
Ability to facilitate patient and family/caregiver participation in oncology care, with ability to recommend and contribute to team and/or family/caregiver meetings.
Ability to make clinical decisions guided by experience, policies, consultation, and evidence-based practice.
Ability to actively participate in team meetings related to care planning in the setting of disruptive/challenging patient/family/caregiver support person behavior.
Ability to understand and communicate information to interdisciplinary team, patients, families, caregivers, and community partners (e.g., agencies, professional organizations, etc.).
Ability to be sensitive, responsive to, and advocate for the needs of diverse populations in the setting of serious illness; including diversity in gender identity, age, culture, race, religion, socioeconomic status, abilities, and sexual orientation.
Ability to adjust to change within a fast-paced working environment.
Ability to integrate professional ethical principles (e.g., confidentiality, boundaries) and adhere to relevant professional, departmental, and organizational standards for patient and family care.
Ability to write clear and complete biopsychosocial assessments, progress notes, and other forms of documentation in the EMR, keeping with Divisional and Institutional policies.
Adheres to Social Work Division practice and administrative standards and policies (e.g., HIPAA, high-risk sign out, scheduling).
Position Schedule: Monday through Friday 8:30am - 5:00pm. This a hybrid position, 3 days onsite and 2 days remote.
South Shore Hospital Compensation Pay Range: $79,830.40 - $107,432.00
EEO and Compliance
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute is an equal opportunity employer and affirms the right of every qualified applicant to receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, gender identity or expression, national origin, sexual orientation, disability, age, ancestry, military service, protected veteran status, or other characteristics protected by law.
Pay Transparency Statement: The hiring range is based on market pay structures, with individual salaries determined by factors such as business needs, market conditions, internal equity, and based on the candidate’s relevant experience, skills and qualifications. For union positions, the pay range is determined by the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA).
#J-18808-Ljbffr