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General Facts about Social Work
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Social workers have the right education, experience, and dedication to
help people help themselves whenever and wherever they need it. It takes
a bachelor's, master's, or doctoral social work degree — with a minimum
number of hours in supervised fieldwork — to become a social worker.
- Social workers help people in all stages of life, from children to the
elderly, and in all situations from adoption to hospice care.
- You can find social workers in hospitals, police departments, mental health
clinics, military facilities, and even corporations.
- Professional social workers are the nation's largest providers of mental
health services. According to government sources, more than 60 percent of
mental health treatment is delivered by social workers.
- More than 600,000 people in the United States hold social work degrees.
- The Veteran's Administration employs more than 4,200 MSWs to assist veterans
and their families with individual and family counseling, patient education,
end of life planning, substance abuse treatment, crisis intervention, and
other services.
- Forty percent of mental health professionals working with the Red Cross
Disaster Services Human Resources system are social workers.
- There are more than 170 social workers in national, state, and local elected
office, including two U.S. Senators and four U.S. Representatives.
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the need for social workers
is expected to grow twice as fast as any other occupation, especially in
gerontology, home healthcare, substance abuse, private social service agencies,
and school social work.
For more information about Social Workers, please visit http://www.helpstartshere.org/About_Social_Workers.html
To learn more about social work, visit 
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