Full-Time

Medical Social Worker

Posted on 5/9/2026

Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

5,001-10,000 employees

Pediatric healthcare provider and teaching partner

Compensation Overview

$65.5k - $107.1k/yr

Company Does Not Provide H1B Sponsorship

Chicago, IL, USA

In Person

Category
Medical, Clinical & Veterinary (1)
Requirements
  • Master's degree in social work from a university approved by the Council for Social Work Education
  • Current Illinois State Social Work licensure (Licensed Social Worker) required
  • LCSW licensure is preferred
  • Work or internship experience in a health care, child welfare or mental health setting preferred
  • Experience working with children and families
  • Ability to think proactively, creatively, and take initiative appropriately
  • Demonstrates excellent communication, critical-thinking, and interpersonal skills
  • Demonstrates ability to work as a part of multiple teams
  • Spanish language abilities and skills strongly preferred
  • Stamina and energy to maintain direct patient contact on a regular basis with seriously ill persons, to coordinate multiple demands made on time, and to fulfill on-call requirements as assigned
Responsibilities
  • Coordinates service delivery with families and appropriate team members across the continuum.
  • Makes necessary referrals to other team members and/or community resources.
  • Collaborates with the family to assist them in utilizing community service linkages.
  • Meets daily with the inpatient floor case manager to review inpatient census, as well as to proactively identify and address any potential barriers to discharge, should this social worker be assigned to an inpatient unit.
  • Identifies, assesses, and responds to child/family needs; includes in this process (identification, assessment, response) age-specific developmental needs, psychosocial needs, cultural needs, and spiritual needs.
  • Particularly focuses on addressing the social and emotional needs of families that impact on a patient's medical treatment and outcome.
  • Develops relationships with families that are caring, trusting, reliable, and beneficial.
  • Utilizes these relationships for the patient's well-being and treatment.
  • Provides timely and effective intervention for families in emergency/crisis situations.
  • This includes dying/death/bereavement; protective services and domestic violence issues, codes, deterioration of child's health status, or other situations deemed emergent by the family or health care team.
  • Documents in a thorough and timely manner in accordance with professional standards (see assessment/documentation policies).
  • Communicates with members of the health care team, through formal and informal means of transmitting information, in order to provide optimal care of patients and families.
  • Informs health care team of the role of community and other internal providers in impacting a social and emotional status of a child and family.
  • Assists case managers in discharge planning and community linkages for families with complex social and emotional needs.
  • Maintains and role models professional boundaries within social work and health care teams.
  • Addresses the psychosocial/spiritual/developmental/cultural needs of the child and family throughout the continuum of care.
  • Participates regularly in the team's interdisciplinary rounds.
  • Participates in the team's group problem-solving and program planning.
  • Collaborates with team to develop programs that target high-risk families and to maximize opportunities for preventive health care for all families served.
  • Educates interdisciplinary team regarding how social and emotional issues impact on a family's coping with illness and response to treatment.
  • Leads team and other family service professional in establishing family services goals for team care delivery.
  • Recognizes that response to the customer and the changing environment may involve going beyond the confines of the traditional job description.
  • Maintains an environment that reflects pride and ownership and shows a willingness to care for the surroundings.
  • Performs administrative and project management duties, as assigned.
  • May precept social work students.
  • Maintains appropriate records and statistics.
  • Participates in hospital-wide social work intake system.
  • Participates in hospital-wide social work on-call system.
  • Maintains and enhances information and referral lists for staff use.
  • Communicates with team on changing hospital, community agency, and governmental policies that impact on the treatment and care of children and their families.
  • Performs job functions adhering to service principles with customer service focus of innovation, service excellence and teamwork to provide the highest quality care and service to our patients, families, co-workers and others.
Desired Qualifications
  • LCSW licensure preferred
  • Spanish language abilities strongly preferred
  • Experience working with children and families in a health care, child welfare or mental health setting preferred
Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

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Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago is a leading pediatric hospital and teaching hospital, providing comprehensive medical care for children across specialties. It operates as the region’s largest pediatric healthcare provider, offering hospital-based care and serving as a teaching and research partner with Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Its services are delivered through pediatric clinicians and researchers who diagnose, treat, and manage a wide range of childhood conditions, often incorporating education and clinical research into care. The hospital differentiates itself by its size in the region, its strong academic affiliation, and national rankings across all 10 pediatric specialties by U.S. News & World Report. Its goal is to improve child health by delivering high-quality care, advancing medical knowledge through research, and training the next generation of pediatric clinicians.

Company Size

5,001-10,000

Company Stage

Grant

Total Funding

$10M

Headquarters

Chicago, Illinois

Founded

1900

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Downers Grove hospital fills pediatric ED gap in western suburbs.
  • Camp Kuumba swim program models Illinois Water Safety Plan.
  • iHeartMedia Radiothon raises over $1 million for pediatric care.

What critics are saying

  • Illinois Review Board denies Downers Grove certificate of need.
  • Low-acuity facility cannibalizes Chicago campus routine admissions.
  • Advocate Children's Hospital saturates western suburbs ED market.

What makes Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago unique

  • Largest pediatric provider in Chicago region with 130-year legacy.
  • Ranked #1 in Illinois across 11 pediatric specialties by U.S. News 2025-2026.
  • Only independent research-driven children's hospital in Illinois.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

Life Insurance

Disability Insurance

Health Savings Account/Flexible Spending Account

Unlimited Paid Time Off

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Hybrid Work Options

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Tuition Reimbursement

Adoption Assistance

Childcare Support

Elder Care Support

Employee Assistance Program

Wellness Program

Mental Health Support

Discount on services at Lurie Children’s facilities

Discount purchasing program

Company News

Daily Herald
Mar 13th, 2026
Lurie gives new details as it advances plan for children's hospital in Downers Grove

Lurie gives new details as it advances plan for children's hospital in Downers Grove. Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital wants to build a second hospital on this site near I-355 and Butterfield Road in Downers Grove. Courtesy of Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital Posted March 13, 2026 1:21 pm Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital is advancing its plans to build a second hospital in Downers Grove. Hospital officials held an open house Thursday night to answer questions from the public. The Downers Grove Village Council added hospitals as a permitted use March 3 to the Esplanade at Locust Point planned-unit development, which is where Lurie wants to build the hospital. The development is west of I-355 and south of Butterfield Road. The 100-acre site, which began construction in 1990, contains hotels, office buildings, restaurants and stores. Lurie would buy the land on which the hospital would be located. The hospital still needs to submit a detailed site plan, including architectural drawings and engineering, for approval by the village's planning and zoning commission and the village council. It has not submitted such plans yet, a Lurie spokesman said Friday. Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago. The hospital wants to build a second hospital in Downers Grove. Courtesy of Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital The hospital also needs to get a certificate of need from the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board. It has not applied for that yet. At Thursday's meeting, hospital officials talked about their plans for a 210,000-square-foot hospital and a 60,000-square-foot outpatient treatment center. The hospital could have 12 intensive-care-unit beds and would have a helicopter pad. In response to a question about whether money from the state government or property taxes would be used to pay for the construction, Chief Financial Officer Alex Miller said, "No." Miller said Lurie would pay for it with existing cash, gifts, and by borrowing via the sale of bonds. Lurie publicly announced the project Jan. 28. The next week, Downers Grove's planning and zoning commission voted on the request to amend the PUD, and a Lurie attorney spoke at the meeting. Shanley said there is no pediatric-specific emergency department in the Western suburbs, and that patients do better when they receive specialty care. In January, a spokesman said the hospital would be for "low-acuity" patients - including those who need supportive care, such as oxygen treatment for influenza and RSV infections, or IV fluids for dehydration due to gastrointestinal viruses. It would not admit children undergoing complex medical treatments, such as for cancer or organ transplants. It would have 50 inpatient beds and an emergency department, Dr. Thomas Shanley, Lurie's president and chief executive officer, said at the time.

Evanston Now
Dec 31st, 2025
'From surviving to thriving'

'From surviving to thriving' Here is a tragic reality, according to Chicago's Lurie Children's Hospital: "Black youth in the United States disproportionately experience fatal drowning at rates up to five times higher than their White peers." The main reason, Lurie said in a release, is socioeconomic reality... "historical and structural barriers Black youth face in learning to swim." In an effort to overcome those barriers, Lurie partnered with Evanston-based Camp Kuumba, a summer camp that focuses on Black children, offering a swim program for third-through-fifth graders in 2023 and 2024. According to the study, published recently in the International Journal of Aquatic Research and Education, after the three-week program, participants "demonstrated significant improvement in objective and parental-reported swim skills." A total of 64 children took part, about half per summer. The swim program consisted of eight, 60-minute sessions over three weeks each session... According to Dr. Michelle Macy, who directed the study for Lurie, "Swimming is more than a sport. It is a life and safety skill that every person deserves to learn." Not only did the program help the ability to swim, but also added to a sense of pride and empowerment among the 8-10 year-old participants. "The program," Dr. Macy is quoted in the release, "filled a critical gap for these kids who didn't have opportunities to learn to swim at younger ages." Only one student dropped out over the course of both summers. "Potential reasons for the high retention rate," Dr. Macy said, was the confidence-building aspect of the program, and the fact that the kids were surrounded by others just like themselves. Andy Miner, co-director of the program, science teacher at ETHS, and head of the Wildkit Water Polo Club, said "Building trust and confidence with each swimmer and family was crucial. Once we created an environment where the kids knew they belonged and felt themselves growing and learning in the water, the results began to compound. The culture shifted from surviving to thriving." The study was funded by the Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant College Program, in conjunction with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. While the study covered 2023 and 2024, Miner told Evanston Now that the swim program also ran this year at Camp Kuumba thanks to a previous donation, plus the above-mentioned grant. He added that there are also plans to have the program in 2026, likely with "more fund raising... through Camp Kuumba and not the swim program specifically." Organizers of the Lurie study said this Evanston-based swim instruction can serve as a model for future learn-to-swim programs for historically marginalized students, and "will be used in the development of the Water Safety Plan for the State of Illinois." Here's a recap of its live coverage of Monday night's meeting of the Evanston City Council.

Newswise
Sep 17th, 2025
Lurie Children's Ranked #5 in Pediatrics on Newsweek's List of World's Best Specialized Hospitals 2026

Lurie Children's ranked #5 in pediatrics on Newsweek's list of World's Best Specialized Hospitals 2026.

Richard Group
Jul 9th, 2025
Richard Unveils Well-Being Pillar of Purpose Builder Program

CHICAGO, July 9, 2025 - Richard today announced the well-being pillar of its Purpose Builder Program through a comprehensive partnership with Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago.

Cure SMA
Jul 1st, 2025
Cure SMA Awards $100,000 Grant to Yongchao Ma, PhD, at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Cure SMA awards $100,000 grant to yongchao Ma, PhD, at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago.