Community Care Community Care Social Work News & Social Care Jobs
Menu
  • Jobs/Careers
    • Jobs
    • Employer Profiles
    • Workforce Insights
    • Podcasts
    • Careers Zone
    ▼
  • Learning
    • Community Care Inform Adults
    • Community Care Inform Children
    ▼
  • Events
    • Masterclasses
    • Webinars
    • Community Care Live
    ▼
  • E-newsletters
  • News
    • Adults
    • Children
    • Social work leaders
    • Workforce
    • Choose Social Work
    • Write for Community Care
    ▼
  • Network
    • The Social Work Community
    ▼
  • Search
  • ID
    Community Care
    • Menu
    • Jobs/Careers
      • Jobs
      • Employer Profiles
      • Workforce Insights
      • Podcasts
      • Careers Zone
    • Learning
      • Community Care Inform Adults
      • Community Care Inform Children
    • Events
      • Masterclasses
      • Webinars
      • Community Care Live
    • E-newsletters
    • News
      • Adults
      • Children
      • Social work leaders
      • Workforce
      • Choose Social Work
      • Write for Community Care
    • Network
      • The Social Work Community
    • Search
      • Register
      • Login
      Jobs Live Inform

      Tips on managing risk in social work

      Managing risk is at the heart of social work - here's how to do it effectively

      By Ruth Hardy on January 13, 2017 in Careers Zone, Inform Children
      Risk
      Photo: Fuzzbones/Fotolia

      Mary Mustoe is a registered social worker and runs her own company, Callander Associates, which focuses on leadership and communication skills. Mustoe has developed Community Care Inform Children’s guide, for team managers, to managing risk in social work.

      Below, we outline some of the top tips from Mustoe’s guide, last updated in March 2021. Community Care Inform subscribers can read the full article here.

      Managing risk is one of the most important and complex areas of social work practice. When risk isn’t correctly handled and responded to, the consequences can be catastrophic. For team managers, being responsible for the risks your social workers are holding, and knowing how to support and challenge their practice, can be daunting.

      • Managing risk is at the heart of social work. But social workers can’t remove risk or prevent all harm from taking place. As a manager, it’s important that you accept this so that staff are free to practice positively and effectively. If staff live in fear of being scapegoated, they can practice in an overly risk averse way, which doesn’t focus on the best outcomes for service users. But at the same time, you need to be confident about holding staff to defensible decisions and challenging poor practice where necessary.
      • Supervise, don’t micro-manage. Your role as a supervisor is to maintain an overview of cases. Staff will be caught up in the detail of the work, whereas the distance you have should enable you to see changes and risk more clearly. Ask incisive questions of social workers to pinpoint what they’re most worried about, what has changed and what interventions are or are not working. This will help them develop their own skills of reflections and judgement.
      • Learn from serious case reviews. SCRs often highlight that social workers have lost sight of the child by becoming too focused on the parents, and being drawn into their vulnerabilities and problems. The oversight you have means you can ensure that social workers are remaining focused on the needs of the child/ren, and regularly seeing and talking to them.
      • Be aware of factors that can hamper risk management if they are not recognised or addressed. Social workers can start to minimise the risk of harm in their minds for reasons like burnout or compassion fatigue. For example, practitioners working with sex offenders can find that they have “brutalised” by reading court papers, and start to minimise offences. Supervisors need to understand this process and sensitively support staff to ensure they maintain an appropriate understanding of risk.
      • You can’t do everything. Team managers can do a lot to support social workers’ risk management. But there is a limit to what you can do without support from the organisation. Your role of being accountable for practitioners’ performance and for helping them develop and support is also tied to a meditation function. If frontline workers are facing issues and there are risks that can’t be effectively managed – due to high workloads, for example – it is part of your job to convey this to senior managers.

      More from Community Care

      Related articles:

      Word AUTISM and xylophone on color backgroundWorking with autistic children and young people: tips for best practice
      Professionals were ‘misled with ease’ on risks to girl, finds serious case review
      Social workers to strike over caseloads, IT systems and pay
      Comments are closed.

      More from Community Care

      • Network

        The networking platform for social workers


        Connect with peers
      • Jobs

        The latest job opportunities within the social work sector

        Search for jobs
      • Events

        The largest free to attend event for the social work sector

        Register now
      • Learn

        The online learning and practice resource for social workers

        Find out more

      Connect with us

      • facebookFacebook
      • XX
      • LinkedInLinkedIn
      • InstagramInstagram

      Topics

      • Adults
      • Children
      • Workforce
      • Social work leadership

      More information

      • About us
      • Contact us
      • Write for Community Care
      • Accessibility
      • Advertise with us
      • Privacy
      • Terms & conditions
      • Cookies
      Mark Allen Group
      © MA Education 2025. St Jude's Church, Dulwich Road, Herne Hill, London SE24 0PB, a company registered in England and Wales no. 04002826. MA Education is part of the Mark Allen Group. All Rights Reserved