Financial harm in the context of adult protection: the complexity of factors influencing joint decision-making

Financial harm in the context of adult protection: the complexity of factors influencing joint decision-making Melanie Durowse, Jane Fenton The Journal of Adult Protection, Vol. ahead-of-print, No. ahead-of-print, pp.- This research was conducted as part of a PhD study. The purpose of this paper is to explore the factors taken into consideration when multi-agency practitioners were considering financial harm in the context of adult protection and how this influenced their decision-making processes.An adapted q sort methodology initially established the areas of financial harm considered to have additional factors, which led to complexity in adult protection decision making. These factors were further explored in individual interviews or focus groups.The data identified that the decision-making process varied between thorough analysis, rationality and heuristics with evidence of cue recognition, factor weighting and causal thinking. This highlighted the relevance of Kahneman’s (2011) dual processing model in social work practice. Errors that occurred through an over reliance on System 1 thinking can be identified and rectified through the use of System 2 thinking and strengthen social work decision-making.This paper considers the practice of multi-agency adult protection work in relation to financial harm and identifies the influences on decisions.
Source: The Journal of Adult Protection - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Source Type: research