Sarah Wright is the president of Social Work in Progress & the board chair of Unmarried Equality. Her business specializes in geriatric and medical social work, wherever disability, illness, and old age intersect; she and her team provide social workers to a variety of health care settings. Sarah is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis. She is also a member of the Council on Contemporary Families & the National Association of Social Workers. Sarah’s work with Unmarried Equality recognizes that marriage is a “single” relationship type, but the only one that comes with institutional benefits, rights, and privileges.
Sarah is a proud alum of The Op-Ed Project, and her work has been featured in the NYT’s “Room for Debate” blog and the Washington Post’s “In Theory” & “Solo-ish” blogs.
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Forming Your Care Team
Sarah Wright [April 3, 2016] -
Why it's time to stop glorifying marriage
The Washington Post [February 9, 2016] -
Married or not, all families deserve equal benefits
The Washington Post [September 16, 2015] -
Mediphilia: Self-diagnosed with a love of doctors
KevinMD [June 1, 2015] -
Troubled children, dysfunctional system
Sentinel & Enterprise [January 5, 2014] -
Society Needs to Look Beyond Marriage
The New York Times [July 24, 2014]