DSW

PCN Reflection

Sharing here the reflection I shared with my DSW program on the use of professional collaboration networks, in response to a request by Dr. Michelle FK

The Professional Collaboration Network is, at least in theory, a sound tool to gain feedback and input. It sounds nice to have a network of experts who can help guide someone through a doctoral process in which experts may not exist within the School of Social Work. My takeaways from this practice, as I experienced it in this doctoral program, and as I have noted in last semester’s reflection and will reiterate here, are entirely negative.

I have found that, in practice, the PCN process as implemented in our program is one that is – while well intentioned – deeply flawed, borderline unethical and not at all worth the effort that was put into it: by the faculty or the students.

The first take away is that Implementation Mapping, and I would venture to say most (if not all) implementation models and frameworks require the inclusion of stakeholders voices (Eldredge et al., 2016). Full stop. This makes the PCN entirely redundant. Redundancy is wasted time, and wasted time is wasted money.

As I mentioned in my reflection for SW633: the PCN cannot replace a formal implementation team. PCN members do not have the training or knowledge to do so. They are experts in their various fields, not in implementation science. Moreso, they are not (necessarily) experts in the areas of research that we are conducting (on top of the implementation process we are working through). Those of us who plan to use our DSW for its intended purposes will not need, nor ever use a PCN when those of us (myself included) venture out to be implementation scientists in the world. We will include all of those who ought to be included because it is part and parcel of the implementation process. Additionally, those of us who cleave to the principles of trauma-informed care (Butler et al., 2019; Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA), 2014) would do this anyway.

Students worked to develop a robust PCN at the very start of the program before we – as doctoral students– really had any idea how they would be helpful. This means that I developed a PCN of over 30 people who were ready, and willing to help me…and who mostly had nothing to do but provide blips and drops of feedback as they could. Additionally, the continued use of twitter immediately became untenable with the takeover by Elon Musk.

My impression was that the doctoral program was equallyat a loss to explain exactly how the PCN should be appropriately utilized. I remained hopeful, and yet the class on engaging the PCN in our second year was an effort in futility. I have – never – had a class that I could not find one redeeming morsel of information in until this course. Not once. Not during my BA, my two masters, this doctoral program, or the entirety of my military training and education (which is nearly as extensive as my academic career).

It is clear, upon reflection, that the PCN came about from an academic perspective. This perspective, as it relates to the DSW program and cohort is terribly problematic. All of us in the DSW, with the exception of one of my colleagues, are professionals who work (primarily) outside of Academia. Academia should not have been the guiding light of this program (which seeks to reduce the research to practice gap that has been created by academia). Rather, business, workers collectives, and other lenses should have been used.

Had a literature review been conducted before swallowing the concept of PCN wholesale, the existence of Business Information Networks (BINs) would have – or should have – been clearly evident. Business Information Networks (see: https://www.bni.com; http://BINLI.org; and others) are small groups of working professionals, working in different fields, who meet regularly and who provide one another with leads, resources, information, and support.

It is done in a way that is ethical (from a business perspective) where everyone contributes to the other in a pragmatic, definable fashion, and where no one asks someone else to provide labor that goes uncompensated.

The “I’ll help you, if you help me” quid-pro-quo that exists in academia has subtle payoffs (authorship, potential use for tenure). It carries no water or weight in the clinical, consulting, or corporate worlds in which I exist and function. I would argue that it is also exploitative of professors as well, but I will leave that to the halls of the academy to address.

I found the process distressing, angering, annoying, frustrating, and generally a barrier to conducting my work. It was not a feature, but rather a bug of the program. I will do everything I can, as an Alumni, to help the school remove this deleterious component of the program.

References

Butler, L. D., Critelli, F. M., & Carello, J. (2019). Trauma and human rights integrating approaches to address human suffering. Springer International Publishing.

Eldredge, L. K. B., Markham, C. M., Ruiter, R. A. C., Fernández, M. E., Kok, G., & Parcel, G. S. (2016). Planning health promotion programs: An intervention mapping approach (4th edition [Kindle]). Jossey-Bass.

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA). (2014). Trauma-informed approach and trauma specific interventions.https://www.samhsa.gov/nctic/trauma-interventions

Getting back into daily/nightly blogging

I’ve had this blog for over 21 years (in a variety of iterations). One of the things that I used to do throughout high school, and undergrad, was blog – at least nightly, if not a few times during the day. I like using my blog as a space to gather my thoughts, concerns, ideas, fears, worries, inspiration, etc…so that they don’t tale up residence in my head.

Sometimes I may write something important…rarely profound…mostly mundane (but human) as to the inner workings of my mind, and my life.

I had to stop for quite a few years (at least publicly) when I was in the IDF (the Intelligence Corps, and InfoSec took that kind of stuff quite seriously). Now that, in so many ways, my life is my own again (no longer in the IDF, no longer in graduate school) and I transition into my young adulthoold (turning 40 in a few years) I want to make sure that I return to this habit, and bring it foreward with me.

I like being able to look back to a random post, or investigate how I handled (or perceived) a situation years ago. I’ve gotten a lot of insight into my life, and even things that happened in my family that, while they didn’t make sense at the time, with the benefit of hindsight I understand ten or fifteen years later.

Today was spent seeing patients and resting, and I finally got a handle on cleaning my bedroom. I’ve been taking care to make sure that each area of the house has been clean…but sacrificing my bedroom as part of that mix…and finally, as we enter summer, I’m working to make sure that (come fall) my bedroom will be as comfy as possible for the winter.

Tomorrow is Pride in Buffalo/Western New York, and I look forward to being in the parade with friends, followed by a union meeting (and some more cleaning). Workin to get caught up on last years finances this week (by next week at the latest)…I am amazed at how much was truly put on the backburner in order to finish my doctorate…I can only see it now that I’m able to take a few steps back and look at all the work that needs to be done.

Fortunately, it’s getting there…and with that, it’s time for bed (maybe some nighttime popcorn…definitely some nighttime popcorn), some cartoons, and then an audiobook.

Featured Image by Juan Agustín Correa Torrealba from Pixabay

Starting my Doctor of Social Work Degree & Reducing the Feedback Loop

Today was the first day of DSW orientation for what is going to be the second cohort of students (Class of 2023!) for the UB School of Social Work’s Doctor of Social Work Program in Social Welfare & Implementation Science. A forward thinking program working to bridge the gap between agencies and universities in order to reduce the time between when research is conducted and when research is implemented in the field.

It was wonderful to meet my colleagues virtually (while I would have loved to have met them IRL, social distancing and safety remain paramount as we continue to battle COVID-19). I live in University Heights and work one minute from my house in the same zip-code on the East Side. University Heights and my workplace share a zip-code of 14215. Presently, and throughout the pandemic, the 14215 has had some of the highest infection rates in the City of Buffalo.

I don’t think it’s hyperbole to say that a few capstone projects are likely going to be on implementing interventions during pandemics. I couldn’t help but reflect on what it means to be starting now, in this context, in this background, in this zip-code, in this 2020 reality of the United States.

So what is my DSW, what exactly am I studying, and why?

Currently it’s estimated that it takes around ten years for completed research to be implemented in the field. This means that once initial research has hit the ground running (…ten years later…) that a feedback loop has to be created between the universities and researchers who can study it further and the agencies who are implementing it.

The researchers need to find out if their interventions are effective, if they’re applicable to other groups (have they only been studied on one kind of group, or one kind of condition?), and what (if any) changes can, or need to be made for them to be transferable…and then we wait even longer for more research to be done, that research to be disseminated back to the field and implemented again, and feedback sent back to the universities (and round and round and round we go).

My cohort, and the cohort before us…and those that are going to come after us, are about to change all of that. We’re working to reduce that feedback loop, to make it more efficient, and to work to understand systemic barriers that agencies, and workers face, along with the populations that they serve. We also want to reduce the barriers that researchers have, in order to shorten bridges and close gaps. While we do this, we conduct our own research into the best ways of implementing new evidence based practices, science, and technologies into the field so that they can be deployed as safely and as rapidly as possible.

What can we do to make sure agencies and workers remain on top of cutting edge information and technology while understanding the realities they face in their day-to-day lives? How do we help researchers design methods that take into account better the realities of the field, so that they can receive more accurate data? How do we make that feedback loop into weeks or months instead of a decade? A lofty goal, but a necessary one as we move past 2020 and into the future.

I am beyond excited. I took a lot of notes in my BuJo today; I would say that most of them were some inspirational, in the moment quotes, from our professors (and others were resources, and just good information to have). I need to now process that, and this moment.

Welcome to UB Class of 2023!