Created at: December 04, 2025 00:07
Company: Veterans Health Administration
Location: Tulsa, OK, 74101
Job Description:
The Eastern Oklahoma VA Health Care System located in Tulsa, OK is currently recruiting for one (1) Social Worker - Behavioral Health Interdisciplinary Program to work in Mental Health Service to be located in Tulsa.
Basic Requirements: Citizenship. Be a citizen of the United States. (Non-citizens may be appointed when it is not possible to recruit qualified citizens in accordance with chapter 3, section A, paragraph 3g this part). Education. Have a master's degree in social work from a school of social work fully accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE). Graduates of schools of social work that are in candidacy status do not meet this requirement until the School of Social Work is fully accredited. A doctoral degree in social work may not be substituted for the master's degree in social work. Verification of the degree can be made by going to http://www.cswe.org/Accreditation to verify that the social work degree meets the 4 accreditation standards for a masters of social work. English Language Proficiency. Candidates must be proficient in spoken and written English to be appointed as authorized by 38 U.S.C. ยง 7403(f). Licensure. Persons hired or reassigned to social worker positions in the GS-0185 series in VHA must be licensed or certified by a state to independently practice social work at the master's degree level. Current state requirements may be found by going to http://vaww.va.gov/OHRM/T38Hybrid/. May qualify based on being covered by the Grandfathering Provision as described in the VA Qualification Standard for this occupation (only applicable to current VHA employees who are in this occupation and meet the criteria). Grade Determinations: GS-9: Experience, Education, and Licensure. None beyond the basic requirements. Demonstrated Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities. In addition to the experience above, the candidate must demonstrate all of the following KSAs: (a) Ability to utilize a Veteran centric approach when providing interventions and counseling for Veterans, their family members, caregivers, and survivors. (b) Ability to assess the psychosocial functioning and needs of Veterans and their family members, and to formulate and implement a treatment plan, identifying the Veterans problems, strengths, weaknesses, coping skills, and assistance needed. (c) Ability to implement treatment modalities in working with individuals, families, and groups to achieve treatment goals. This requires judgment and skill in utilizing supportive, problem solving, or crisis intervention techniques. (d) Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships and communicate with clients, staff, and representatives of community agencies. (e) Fundamental knowledge of medical and mental health diagnoses, disabilities, and treatment procedures. This includes acute, chronic, and traumatic illnesses/injuries; common medications and their effects/side effects; and medical terminology. GS-11: Experience and Licensure. Completion of a minimum of one year of post-MSW experience equivalent to the GS-9 grade level in the field of health care or other social work-related settings, (VA or non- VA experience) and licensure or certification in a state at the independent practice level. NOTE: For appointment licensure or certification at this level please refer to paragraph 3c. OR Education. In addition to meeting basic requirements, a doctoral degree in social work from a school of social work may be substituted for the required one year of professional social work experience in a clinical setting. Demonstrated Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities. In addition to the experience above, candidates must demonstrate all of the following KSAs: (a) Knowledge of community resources, how to make appropriate referrals to community and other governmental agencies for services, and ability to coordinate services. (b) Skill in independently conducting psychosocial assessments and treatment interventions to a wide variety of individuals from various socio-economic, cultural, ethnic, educational and other diversified backgrounds. (c) Knowledge of medical and mental health diagnoses, disabilities and treatment procedures (i.e. acute, chronic and traumatic illnesses/injuries, common medications and their effects/side effects, and medical terminology) to formulate a treatment plan. (d) Skill in independently implementing different treatment modalities in working with individuals, families, and groups who are experiencing a variety of psychiatric, medical, and social problems to achieve treatment goals. (e) Ability to provide consultation services to new social workers, social work graduate students, and other staff about the psychosocial needs of patients and the impact of psychosocial problems on health care and compliance with treatment. Preferred Experience: Prefer substance abuse experience. Reference: For more information on this qualification standard, please visit https://www.va.gov/ohrm/QualificationStandards/. The full performance level of this vacancy is GS-11. The actual grade at which an applicant may be selected for this vacancy is in the range of GS-9 to GS-11. Physical Requirements: This position is predominately a clinical/administrative position. The clinical component of this position provides direct services to patients and their families through casework. Incumbents must be physically and mentally able to efficiently perform the essential functions of the position without hazard to themselves or others. Normal work of the position requires visual acuity (with the ability to read typewritten characters without strain, corrective lenses permitted), keen hearing, clear distinctive speech, and manual dexterity. This position requires potentially moderate levels of lifting and carrying (15-44 pounds). The incumbent may occasionally be exposed to patients who are combative secondary to delirium, dementia, or psychiatric disorders. The incumbent must be a mature, flexible, sensible individual capable of working effectively in stressful situations, able to shift priorities based on patient needs. Must complete annual Employee Health requirements, such as annual TB screening or testing, as a condition of employment.
VA Careers - Social Work: https://youtube.com/embed/enRhz_ua_UU Total Rewards of a Allied Health Professional This position is to provide substance use disorder (SUD), services in an outpatient, setting to the Veteran population enrolled at the Jack C. Montgomery VA Medical Center. Services include provision of assessment on an outpatient basis within a behavioral health interdisciplinary program (BHIP) team. Clinical SUD treatment in the format of intake/assessments, family, individual, and group therapies are provided. Major duties and responsibilities of the position: Screening/Assessment: The SUD BHIP social worker will develop an assessment of the Veteran in collaboration with the BHIP team, the Veteran, family members and significant others. The goal of the assessment is to highlight the Veteran's strengths, limitations, and internal/external supports and service needs to optimize the Veteran's functional status, formulate a diagnosis, and lay the foundation for the treatment plan, if necessary. Treatment Planning/Goal Setting - The SUD BHIP social worker is responsible for developing the treatment plan and setting achievable and measurable treatment goals with the Veteran/family. Referral to service providers - Throughout the course of treatment the SUD BHIP social worker is the subject matter expert on VA and/or community resources. Resource Usage/Development - The SUD BHIP social worker is responsible for using the current behavioral medicine/social work resource file of VA and community social service programs and enhancing the content to the benefit of Veterans. Advocacy - SUD BHIP social worker understands the complexity of bureaucracy and will act as an advocate when it serves the best interest of the Veteran/family. Education/Health promotion and prevention - SUD BHIP social worker provides education related to VA and community resources, entitlements, Advance Directives/Living Will and will refer Veterans/families/couples to the appropriate service provider for identified health education needs. Coordination of non-institutional and institutional services - The SUD BHIP social worker will review the progress notes from the other providers to accurately determine the strengths and limitations of each Veteran being referred to for SUD services. Supportive counseling - SUD BHIP social worker will provide the Veterans and their caregivers with ongoing supportive counseling. Ethics- SUD BHIP social worker will utilize professionalism and ethical standards including the SUD BHIP social workers' code of ethics in the delivery of service without exception. Therapy- SUD BHIP social worker will conduct individual, family, and group therapy on an outpatient basis to deliver the services needed to the Veteran. Discharge planning and aftercare-SUD BHIP social worker works with Veteran/family in identifying community-based self-help groups and other resources to continue substance abuse and co-occurring disorder recovery and strengthen family relationships. Patient satisfaction-SUD BHIP social worker coordinates with BHIP Team in distributing and collecting patient satisfaction surveys to ensure quality services are being rendered. Treatment team- SUD BHIP social worker is a member of the BHIP team and maintains communication with team members. Patient compliance- SUD BHIP social worker will order drug and alcohol screens to ensure patient compliance within the BHIP team and corresponding SUD specialty program. Administrative responsibilities - The SUD BHIP social worker will enter all Veteran/family contacts in the electronic record using appropriate formats and templates. Work Schedule: Monday - Friday; 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM Recruitment Incentive (Sign-on Bonus): Not Authorized Permanent Change of Station (Relocation Assistance): Not Authorized Pay: Competitive salary and regular salary increases Paid Time Off: 37-50 days of annual paid time offer per year (13-26 days of annual leave, 13 days of sick leave, 11 paid Federal holidays per year) Selected applicants may qualify for credit toward annual leave accrual, based on prior [work experience] or military service experience Parental Leave: After 12 months of employment, up to 12 weeks of paid parental leave in connection with the birth, adoption, or foster care placement of a child Child Care Subsidy: After 60 days of employment, full time employees with a total family income below $144,000 may be eligible for a childcare subsidy up to 25% of total eligible childcare costs for eligible children up to the monthly maximum of $416.66 Retirement: Traditional federal pension (5 years vesting) and federal 401K with up to 5% in contributions by VA Insurance: Federal health/vision/dental/term life/long-term care (many federal insurance programs can be carried into retirement) Telework: Situational (Ad-hoc) Virtual: This is not a virtual position Functional Statement #: 623-54473-0; 623-54474-0 Permanent Change of Station (PCS): Not authorized