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BJSW Advance Access published online on October 31, 2005

British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bch348
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Association of Social Workers. All rights reserved.

Article

United We Stand? Partnership Working in Health and Social Care and the Role of Social Work in Services for Older People

Mark Lymbery 1*

1 Senior Lecturer in Social Work at the University of Nottingham

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Mark Lymbery, E-mail: mark.lymbery{at}nottingham.ac.uk


   Abstract

The concepts of ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’ have become amongst the most critical themes of ‘new’ Labour’s social policy, particularly in respect of the delivery of health and social care. Although the terms are rarely precisely defined and hence have become problematic to analyse, in most understandings successful partnerships rely upon good systems of inter-professional collaboration. Through revisiting the extensive literature on the sociology of the professions, and the nature of interprofessional working, this paper will argue that effective collaborative working within health and social care is hard to achieve, particularly in the light of the vast differences in power and culture between various occupational groupings, and the inherently competitive nature of professions jostling for territory in the same areas of activity. It suggests that these issues cannot be resolved unless they are properly understood; a rhetorical appeal to the unmitigated benefits of ‘partnership’ alone will not produce more effective joint working. In addition, it notes that an appropriate role for social work in the context of partnership working has yet to be defined and proposes specific tasks and values that distinguish the social worker from other related professionals.

Keywords: social work, older people, partnership, inter-professional working.
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