Purpose: Social workers navigate systemic stressors while managing self-care amid scant institutional support. The purpose of this systematic review is to critically examine the state of social work intervention research for self-care practices.

Methods: This review includes empirical research articles focusing on self-care interventions in social work between 2011 and 2022 ( = 22).

Results: All self-care interventions focused on modifying individual behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge.

Discussion: Most (83%) research on self-care interventions focused on mindfulness, which tended to be associated with improvements in mindfulness, distress management, and clinical self-efficacy. The remaining interventions tended to be associated with improvements in self-care attitudes, knowledge, practices, and wellness.

Conclusion: Structural factors and socioeconomic privilege have been found to be predominant predictors of whether social work students, educators, and practitioners engaged in self-care practices, yet no interventions incorporated structural or institutional variables. Multilevel interventions addressing structural, institutional, and relational determinants of burnout are needed.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11588309PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10497315231208701DOI Listing

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