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Article

Threshold Decisions in Social Work: Using Theory to Support Practice

Details

Citation

Turney D, Alfandari R, Taylor BJ, Ghanem C, Helm D, Killick C, Lyons O, O¡¯Leary D, Ebsen F & Bertotti T (2024) Threshold Decisions in Social Work: Using Theory to Support Practice. The British Journal of Social Work, 54 (7), pp. 2996-3013. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcae073

Abstract
Decision making is an intrinsic and complex aspect of social work practice, requiring consideration of diverse but connected aspects. Decisions are often required as to whether a situation requires protective state intervention or whether it reaches the criteria for public or charitable services. Such instances of deciding whether or not a situation is ¡®on one side of the line or the other¡¯ are referred to in this article as ¡®threshold judgements¡¯. This article draws on experiences and material from a range of social work contexts to explore generalisable theory-informed understandings of ¡®threshold judgements¡¯ and ¡®threshold decisions¡¯ to develop knowledge and skills on this topic. The article outlines signal detection theory and evidence accumulation (¡®tipping point¡¯) theory and discusses these as ways to understand the key concepts underpinning threshold decisions in social work. We then argue that although these threshold concepts are a necessary part of decision making in social work, as in many other aspects of life, they are not sufficient. Operationalising such decisions requires some form of sense-making. Naturalistic decision making and heuristic models of judgement are discussed as frameworks for practice which seem to be useful in this context.

Keywords
decision making; heuristic; professional judgement; sense-making; signal detection; theory for practice; threshold; tipping point

Journal
The British Journal of Social Work: Volume 54, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Publication date31/10/2024
Publication date online31/05/2024
Date accepted by journal19/04/2024
PublisherOxford University Press (OUP)
ISSN0045-3102
eISSN1468-263X

People (1)

Dr Duncan Helm

Dr Duncan Helm

Senior Lecturer, Social Work