Assistant Professor Mickey Sperlich, Associate Professor Patricia Logan-Greene and colleague publish article, "'If not us, then who?': Frontline social workers' perspectives on gun violence"

Published March 8, 2022

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Mickey Sperlich

Mickey Sperlich.

Patricia Logan-Greene

Patricia Logan-Greene.

Kudos to Assistant Professor Mickey Sperlich, Associate Professor Patricia Logan-Greene and their colleague on the publication of their article, "'If not us, then who?': Frontline social workers' perspectives on gun violence" in the Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work.

Sperlich, M., Logan-Greene, P., & Finucane, A. (2021). “If not us, then who?”: Frontline social workers’ perspectives on gun violence. Journal of Evidence-Based Social Work.

Abstract

Purpose

Social work research on preventing gun violence has been sparse and little is known about how much practitioners discuss guns with clients.

Method

Frontline social workers were recruited purposively from the western region of New York state in the United States. This qualitative study used inductive content analysis of focus group and interview transcripts with 27 social workers to explore whether and how they discuss gun violence and safety with clients, their training history, perceived barriers to discussing gun violence, and their view of their role in addressing gun violence.

Results

Most participants had minimal training, but wanted more. Conversations with clients were generally limited. Social workers’ personal opinions and experiences weighed heavily; however, they stressed the importance of engaging with clients neutrally.

Conclusions

Social work needs to develop and test trainings that could provide practitioners with information and skills needed to effectively prevent gun violence.