Aortic valve stenosis is when the aortic valve narrows and cannot fully open. This causes an obstruction of blood flow to the body. Ms. W has two options which are choose to have the surgery or wait until she’s ready to have the surgery, which will be in a year. The surgery is necessary because the risk of delaying surgery can cause problems such as chest pain, syncope, arrhythmias and even heart failure. Valve replacement surgery is an invasive open-heart surgery which would improve blood flow and quality of life. Ms. W could also ask her cardiologist about the possibility of having a less invasive procedure such as transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). This procedure is when a catheter with a balloon tip is inserted into the patient’s…
When I joined the setting ,I observed that Child’M’ finds it difficult to join in with activities and does not interact with his peers ,the staff also…
I will look at factors which can influence the child or young person’s development and discuss the potential effects of different types of transitions on children and young people’s development and ways in which the individual can be supported at such times.…
Jean Piaget investigated how children think. According to Piaget, children’s thought processes change as they mature physically and interact with the world around them. Piaget believed children develop schema, or mental models, to represent the world. As children learn, they expand and modify their schema through the processes of assimilation and accommodation. Assimilation is the broadening of an existing schema to include new information. Accommodation is the modification of a schema as new information is incorporated.…
The Hiding Place opens in 1937 with the ten Boom family celebrating the 100th anniversary of their watch and repair business, now run by the family 's elderly father, Casper. The business took up the ground floor of the family home, known as the Beje. Casper lived with his unmarried daughters Corrie, the watchmaker, and Betsie, who took care of the house. It seemed as if everyone in the Dutch town of Haarlem had shown up to the party, including Corrie 's sister Nollie, her brother, Willem, and her nephews Peter and Kik. Willem, a minister in the Dutch Reformed Church, brought a Jewish man who had just escaped from Germany as a guest. The man 's beard had been burned off by thugs, a grim reminder of what was happening just to the east of Holland. Then, in 1940, the Nazis invaded Holland.…
3.3 Describe with examples how transitions may affect children and young people’s behaviour and development…
3.Piaget's assimilation talks about how children deal with new experiences based on how they already act and think. An example would be a child yanking on moms hair to get attention every time. In accommodation children change their way of thinking and behaving because the way they act now no longer works. An example of accommodation would be the mother putting her hair up so the child doesn't grab it and the child having to communicate a different…
|E |E Complete table |5. Understand the potential effects of transitions on children and young people’s |…
Accommodation: child changes his ways to make sense out of it; modify a scheme to incorporate new information; child creates a new cognitive structure to deal with new information: ex: a child who is bottled fed must learn to drink from a cup…
3.3 Describe with examples how transitions may affect children and young people’s behaviour and development.…
There are several approaches in psychology which attempt to explain mental disorders. The biological approach sees a mental disorder as a medical problem, it assumes mental illness to have a physical cause and the treatment offered is physical. Behavioural approach emphasise learned behaviour, its treatment is based on conditioning principles. New adaptive behaviours are learned. Other approaches which propose causes of mental disorders as psychological are psychodynamic and cognitive approaches. Each approach has its strengths and weaknesses.…
These two models of transition describe the internal struggles, and the external influences that occur when people experience change. The first four stages of Spencer and Adams’ model of transition is similar to Bridges’ ending phase,…
Physical transitions, may be moving to a new country, home, class, school, or year group, moving from home into care, or simply being asked to move on to another activity in class. The way in which a child deals with the transition can have a massive impact on their development. For example, refusing to take part in a new activity or broaden their experiences, may affect a child’s social, emotional and communication development and ultimately impact on their intellectual development.…
Rae (2014, p.3) explains it is evitable that change will bring about some element of loss, even when the change may be a positive one; children are inclined to forget elements of what happened previously in order to come to terms with their loss. As depicted in the EPPSE Project (Evangelou et al. 2008) a large proportion of children and young adults are able to quickly adapt to their new environment. However, there are some children and young adults (like me) who have experienced change and loss at the same time, who were not appropriately or adequately supported at the time, who present as acutely anxious and/or ostensibly unable to cope. This is why I feel that a programme of support for children who are transiting is so essential, not only in terms of guaranteeing the child’s overall well-being but also as a tool to support individualised learning and educational…
This reflective essay will reflect on my experience of the adaptation course. In order to gain an insight into my development I will focus on certain issues that have been prominent during the course.…