
Social work is widely recognized as one of the most mentally and emotionally taxing professions, often demanding long hours, emotional resilience, and a deep commitment to helping others. This is frequently done at the cost of the worker’s own wellbeing. Minister of Human Resources, Thea Garcia, acknowledged the mounting strain on Belizean social workers, stating, “Something’s gotta give.”

Thea Garcia, Minister of Human Development: “I think it’s very taxing on social workers, let me tell you, because you may have, you know life happens and speaking to all of them I noticed that when life happens and so sometimes you’re struggling at home for a variety of reasons, you know, and then you come in to work and their entire job is based on them listening to the problems of different cases that come in now. For example, it might be a child protection case, the symptom or the person acting out would be one of the children. There are larger issues or wider issues at stake that would encompass the entire family. So now you have your own problem, you’re looking at the case from the child’s point of view, but now you have to have. Well now it stems from different problems within the family. And so now you’re listening to all the family’s problem and social workers have as many as 90 cases per social worker. So imagine having your own problems and going to work and listening to 90 different families and their problems. Something’s got to give.”
Her remarks come amid growing global awareness that social workers face high rates of burnout, depression, and emotional fatigue, often due to overwhelming caseloads and limited institutional support.