"Dementia theories of care" Essays and Research Papers

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    Unit 40 - P1 Describe the types of dementia and common signs and symptoms The term ‘dementia’ describes a set of symptoms which can include loss of memory‚ mood changes and problems with communication and reasoning. These symptoms occur when the brain is damaged by certain conditions and diseases‚ including Alzheimer’s disease‚ vascular dementia and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. 
Age is the greatest risk factor for dementia. Dementia affects one in 14 people over the age of 65 and one in six over

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    Dementia is an umbrella term used for many conditions including Alzheimer’s‚ lewy bodys and vascular dementia. It is damage to the brain and its cells‚ it can progress over time either rapidly or slowly. Medication is used to help slow the process down‚ or to help with certain effects from the condition such as sleepless nights‚ agitation. 2. Frontal lobe Movement‚ emotional behaviour‚ personality‚ interpretation and feeling Parietal lobe Language‚ special awareness and recognition Temporal lobe

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    Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia. It includes memory loss‚ difficulties with thinking‚ problem-solving or language‚ and etc. Brain damage due to symptoms by certain diseases is result of Alzheimer’s. Alois Alzheimer was the first person who describes the disease. It is a physical disease and also a progressive disease that affects the human brain. It slowly damages the parts of the brain‚ at first it is generally mild but they get worse over time and start to get involved

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    Explain how using an individual’s care plan contributes to working in a person centred way Explain why it is important to work in a way that embeds person centred values Explain how using an individual’s care plan contributes to working in a person centred way Describe 2 different ways how you find out about‚ and then take into account the history‚ preferences‚ wishes and needs of an individual when planning care and support. Define what is meant by active participation. Describe ways of encouraging

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    here will be whether or not Barack Obama’s plan for health care reform follows the guidelines and principles of philosopher John Rawls’ theory of justice. John Rawls teachings and writings were and still are extremely relevant in the world of political philosophy. Now‚ the view of many opposing philosophers is that justice should be given based on merit‚ and this is also the tendency in modern society. Rawls‚ however‚ proposed a theory that justice should be based on fairness. He suggested that

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    CT236- Principles for implementing duty of care in health‚ social care or children’s and young people’s setting. 1. Explain what it means to have a duty of care in own work role. -Person centred care. -Working within policies and procedures -Working within rules and regulations -Giving each individual their own privacy/dignity. -Making the individuals have their own independence‚ try to get them to do things themselves if they are capable of doing it. -Team work‚ working part as a team

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    Understand and Meet the Nutritional Requirements of Individuals with Dementia 1.1 Describe how cognitive‚ functional and emotional changes associated with dementia can affect eating‚ drinking and nutrition Cognitive behaviour is dysfunctional emotions and behaviours caused by damage in brain affecting part of the brain responsible for memory and all that we learn from birth- how to talk‚ eat etc. This means that person with dementia can forget how important it is to eat and drink. They also may lose

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    Approximately 47 million people are living with the illness called dementia. Dementia can affect everyday aspects of life and can be prevented if you know how to treat it correctly. Dementia delineates a group of symptoms affecting one’s memory‚ thinking‚ and social abilities. Dementia is considered a group of symptoms affecting abilities rather than a specific disease. There are both cognitive and psychological changes in one who has dementia. Difficulty in communication‚ problem solving‚ planning and

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    half of my family in Canada and Guatemala once a year‚ and see my friends that grew up with during the weekend. I wish that this was true for all nannies that work around the world. The chain of care is when a person‚ more likely a women‚ from a developing country comes to a developed country to take care of a family’s elderly or their children and do their housekeeping at the same time. According to Arlie Hochschil‚ a sociology professor‚ claims that more than half of the legal migrants that come

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    effective for patients with dementia. Schaeffer explains that music shares a close relationship with your unconscious emotions and the emotions are activated by musical movement. The feelings are so strong that they are meaningful even if the patient cannot remember who they are. Music therapy improves wellbeing in the following areas: memory recall‚ vocal fluency‚ positive changes in moods‚ and management of pain and discomfort. The basic function of music therapy in dementia patients is to increase

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