Published In
Social Work in Mental Health
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-4-2025
Abstract
The field of social work has a lengthy history of training social workers for community mental health settings, and an ethical commitment to advance human rights and social justice. However, individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum conditions continue to suffer from myriad social injustices, including poverty, social isolation, and lower-life expectancy. This paper outlines these injustices, and reviews historical social work contributions and current training for supporting this population. Finally, the authors outline actions to 1) adopt national practice guidelines that formally acknowledge injustices, including anti-oppressive practice guidelines that are inclusive of lived experience, and 2) revitalize social work’s contributions to models of care for schizophrenia-spectrum populations.
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DOI
10.1080/15332985.2025.2596115
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/44308
Publisher
Informa UK Limited
Citation Details
Blajeski, S. M., Bornheimer, L. A., Wojtalik, J. A., Studer, L., Ben-David, S., Turner, P. R., Flores, A. T., Smith, M. J., Jones, N., & DeVylder, J. E. (2025). Addressing injustices toward individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum conditions: a call to action for social work practice. Social Work in Mental Health, 1–22.