✦ Built by a Social Worker, for Social Workers

Clinical tools made for
the work you actually do.

A curated library of social work–informed worksheets, assessments, psychoeducation guides, and treatment planning tools — with a dedicated oncology collection. Updated quarterly, organized by specialty.

Resource Library 142 resources
Worksheet
Cognitive Restructuring — Thought Record
Assessment
Grief Inventory & Loss Impact Scale
Psychoeducation
Understanding Anxiety: Client Guide
Treatment Plan
OCD Treatment Planning Template
142
Resources
Quarterly
New Drops
6
Specialties
Built for
LCSWs MSWs Oncology Social Workers Medical Social Workers Social Work Supervisors Supervised Trainees

Four core collections,
endlessly useful.

Every resource is authored by a licensed social worker, print-ready, and editable. Filter by modality, population, or presenting concern — including a dedicated oncology collection.

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Worksheets & Handouts
48 resources
Oncology Grief Anxiety Trauma Coping Skills
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Assessment Tools
31 resources
Psychosocial Risk Oncology Intake Burnout
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Psychoeducation Guides
37 resources
Cancer Diagnosis Grief Anxiety Caregiver Support
🗂️
Treatment Planning
26 resources
Goals & Objectives Progress Notes Oncology
Recently Added

Fresh this month.

Worksheet New
Navigating a New Diagnosis: Emotional Processing Worksheet
Guides oncology clients through initial emotional responses to a cancer diagnosis — shock, fear, uncertainty — with structured reflection prompts.
Psychoeducation New
Understanding a Cancer Diagnosis: A Guide for Patients
Plain-language guide covering emotional responses, communicating with care teams, and coping strategies during active treatment.
Treatment Plan
Oncology Social Work Treatment Plan Template
Psychosocial treatment plan template covering adjustment to illness, caregiver strain, financial toxicity, and end-of-life concerns.
Assessment
Oncology Psychosocial Intake Assessment
Comprehensive intake covering diagnosis history, emotional distress, support systems, financial concerns, and goals of care conversations.
Worksheet
Grief & Loss: Continuing Bonds Reflection
A gentle, strengths-based worksheet for clients processing anticipatory or active grief, grounded in continuing bonds theory.
Psychoeducation
Supporting a Loved One Through Cancer: Caregiver Guide
A practical guide for family caregivers covering compassion fatigue, communication with the care team, and finding support for themselves.
ℹ️ All treatment planning resources are clinical support tools intended for use by licensed clinicians. They are designed to support — not replace — independent clinical judgment, diagnosis, and treatment decisions. Resources are appropriate for use within the scope of practice of a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in California under the BBS. No resource constitutes a diagnosis or prescribes a course of treatment.
DSM-Informed Clinical Tools

Treatment plans, goals & interventions
by diagnostic category.

Each category includes a treatment plan template, measurable goal statements, and evidence-informed intervention ideas — formatted for real clinical documentation.

Depressive Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Covers MDD, Persistent Depressive Disorder, and Adjustment Disorder with Depressed Mood. Goals address mood stabilization, behavioral activation, and social functioning.

MDD · Dysthymia · Adjustment w/ Depressed Mood · Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder
Anxiety Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Addresses GAD, Social Anxiety, Panic Disorder, and Specific Phobia. Goals focus on distress tolerance, avoidance reduction, and coping skill development.

GAD · Panic Disorder · Social Anxiety · Specific Phobia · Separation Anxiety
Trauma & Stressor-Related 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

PTSD, Acute Stress, and Adjustment Disorders. Intervention guidance includes trauma-informed approaches appropriate for LCSW scope in California.

PTSD · Acute Stress Disorder · Adjustment Disorders · Reactive Attachment Disorder
Prolonged Grief Disorder 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

DSM-5-TR Prolonged Grief Disorder tools with oncology-specific framing. Goals address grief integration, meaning-making, and restoration of daily functioning.

Prolonged Grief Disorder · Anticipatory Grief · Complicated Bereavement
Somatic Symptom & Related 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Highly relevant in medical settings. Covers Somatic Symptom Disorder, Illness Anxiety, and Psychological Factors Affecting Medical Condition.

Somatic Symptom Disorder · Illness Anxiety · Psychological Factors Affecting Medical Condition
OCD & Related Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

OCD, Body Dysmorphic Disorder, and Hoarding Disorder. Goals target intrusive thought management, compulsion reduction, and functional improvement.

OCD · Body Dysmorphic Disorder · Hoarding Disorder · Trichotillomania
Bipolar & Related Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Psychosocial support tools for Bipolar I, II, and Cyclothymia. Framed for LCSW scope — goals address mood monitoring, stability, medication adherence support, and psychoeducation.

Bipolar I · Bipolar II · Cyclothymia
Personality Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Tools for BPD, Dependent, and Avoidant PD within LCSW scope. Goals focus on distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, and emotional regulation — not personality restructuring.

BPD · Avoidant PD · Dependent PD · Narcissistic PD · OCPD
Neurodevelopmental Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Psychosocial support tools for ADHD and Autism Spectrum Disorder in adult clinical settings. Goals address executive functioning, social navigation, and self-advocacy.

ADHD · Autism Spectrum Disorder · Intellectual Developmental Disorder
Schizophrenia Spectrum 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Psychosocial support tools within LCSW scope. Goals address community functioning, medication support, safety planning, and family psychoeducation. Not for use as diagnostic tools.

Schizophrenia · Schizoaffective Disorder · Brief Psychotic Disorder
Substance Use Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Harm reduction and recovery-oriented tools for Alcohol, Cannabis, Opioid, and Stimulant Use Disorders. Goals address motivation, relapse prevention, and social support rebuilding.

Alcohol Use · Cannabis Use · Opioid Use · Stimulant Use · Sedative Use
Feeding & Eating Disorders 3 resources
Treatment Plan Template Goal Bank Intervention Ideas

Psychosocial support tools for Anorexia, Bulimia, and Binge Eating Disorder within LCSW scope. Framed for use as part of an interdisciplinary care team.

Anorexia Nervosa · Bulimia Nervosa · Binge Eating Disorder · ARFID
Attachment Theory Collection

Understand the patterns.
Support the work.

A complete clinical collection covering attachment theory — from foundational psychoeducation to style-specific assessment and intervention tools for adult clients.

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Attachment Theory: Clinician Overview
A concise clinical reference covering Bowlby and Ainsworth's foundational framework, the internal working model, adult attachment research, and how attachment patterns present across presenting concerns including anxiety, grief, and medical illness.
Clinician Reference 8 pages PDF
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Adult Attachment Style Assessment Tool
An original clinical interview guide and self-reflection questionnaire to help clinicians identify adult attachment patterns across four styles. Designed for use in psychosocial assessment — not a validated diagnostic instrument.
Assessment Tool 6 pages PDF + Editable

Resources by Attachment Style

🟢
Secure Attachment
Comfortable with closeness and autonomy

Clients with secure attachment generally manage distress well but may present following significant loss, medical diagnosis, or relational rupture. Tools support resilience and meaning-making.

  • Psychoeducation: Understanding Secure Attachment — Client Guide
  • Assessment: Secure Base Reflection Worksheet
  • Worksheet: Strengths Mapping — Relational Resilience
🟡
Anxious / Preoccupied
Hyperactivated attachment system

Presents as fear of abandonment, emotional preoccupation, and reassurance-seeking. Common in clients with anxiety, relationship distress, or medical uncertainty. Clinically rich intersection with oncology.

  • Psychoeducation: Understanding Anxious Attachment — Client Guide
  • Assessment: Hyperactivation Patterns Clinical Checklist
  • Worksheet: Self-Soothing & Tolerating Uncertainty
🔵
Avoidant / Dismissing
Deactivated attachment system

Presents as emotional self-sufficiency, minimizing distress, and discomfort with vulnerability. Frequently seen in medical settings where clients downplay psychosocial needs. Key population for oncology social work.

  • Psychoeducation: Understanding Avoidant Attachment — Client Guide
  • Assessment: Deactivation Patterns Clinical Checklist
  • Worksheet: Identifying Needs & Asking for Support
🔴
Disorganized / Fearful
Unresolved fear without strategy

Often linked to trauma history. Presents as contradictory relational behaviors, difficulty trusting the therapeutic relationship, and heightened distress. Tools are trauma-informed and paced carefully.

  • Psychoeducation: Understanding Disorganized Attachment — Client Guide
  • Assessment: Trauma & Attachment History Clinical Guide
  • Worksheet: Safety, Trust & Therapeutic Relationship Building

Simple, honest pricing.

Start free. Cancel anytime. No contracts, no hidden fees.

Solo
For individual social workers & trainees
$9 / month
or $79/yr — save two months
  • Full library access (150+ resources)
  • DSM treatment planning tools
  • Attachment theory collection
  • PDF & editable formats
  • Personal use license
  • 7-day free trial
Team
For agencies, departments & group practices
$34 / month
or $299/yr — best value for teams
  • Everything in Clinician Pro
  • Up to 5 clinician seats
  • Shared team library access
  • Bulk download access
  • Custom resource requests
  • 7-day free trial
Questions

Good questions.
Honest answers.

Who makes these resources?
Every resource is created by a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) in California with hands-on experience across oncology, trauma, ICU, medical-surgical, and inpatient psychiatry. These tools come from real clinical practice — not textbooks.
Are these appropriate for my scope as an LCSW or MSW?
Yes. All resources are designed as clinical support tools within LCSW scope of practice. They are intended to support — not replace — your independent clinical judgment. Tools that touch diagnostic categories (e.g. Bipolar, Schizophrenia) are framed for psychosocial support only and include appropriate scope language.
Can I give these directly to my clients?
Clinician Pro and Team plans include a client distribution license, meaning you can share worksheets, psychoeducation guides, and handouts with clients in your care. The Solo plan covers personal clinical use only.
Do any resources use the PHQ-9, GAD-7, or other validated scales?
No. All tools are original, created specifically for this library. We do not reproduce validated scales, copyrighted instruments, or content from published workbooks. This keeps the library legally clean and ensures the tools are uniquely yours to use.
I'm a supervised trainee — is this useful for me?
Absolutely. The Solo plan is priced to be accessible for trainees and newer clinicians. Treatment planning templates and goal banks are especially useful when you're still building your documentation confidence.
Are resources editable?
Most resources come in both PDF and editable Word format so you can adapt language, add your practice name, or tailor content to your specific client population or setting.
How often is new content added?
New resources are added quarterly, with a focus on oncology, grief, anxiety, and medical social work. Members can submit topic requests — Pro and Team members get priority.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes — cancel anytime, no questions asked. You keep access through the end of your billing period. There are no contracts, no cancellation fees, and no runaround.

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