Unit 39- Support Use of Medication in Social care Settings A)1.1 The Medicine act 1968 Governs the manufacture & supply of medicines. This requires that the local pharmacist or dispensing doctor is responsible for supplying medication. He or she can only do this on the receipt of a prescription from an authorised person eg a doctor. According to the law (The Medicines Act 1968) medicines can be given by a third party‚ e.g. a suitably-trained care worker‚ to the person that they were intended
Premium Prescription drug Medicine Pharmacology
their effectiveness in a care settings. Health and social care professionals have to develop effective communication skills in order to work with the diverse range of people who use and work within care services. The two contexts‚ or types of circumstances‚ in which communication and interaction occur are one-to-one and group contexts. One-to-one communication occurs when one person speaks with or writes to another individual. Examples of one-to-one communication in health care could be a patient talking
Premium Communication Nonverbal communication Sign language
Introduction to Duty of care in Health‚ Social care or children’s and young people’s setting. • To keep individuals safety‚ welfare and interest within the environment • To keep individuals free from harm • To give a choice Working with patients with Dementia‚ duty of care is a key concept. Some times the patient can be confused and violent. Firstly I would introduce myself to the patient and I would ask them if I could take their bloods while I am asking the patient for their consent
Premium Hospital Patient Illness
Discrimination Diversity‚ Equality and Inclusion To understand what discrimination is‚ we first have to understand the meanings of diversity‚ equality and inclusion within our society and social health care. Diversity outlines difference and variety; we are all different we have characteristics that make us individual‚ these come from and include: race‚ religion‚ age‚ gender‚ beliefs‚ appearance‚ abilities‚ talents and sexual orientation. These characteristics give us our uniqueness in society
Premium Discrimination
Understand how to handle information in social care settings. 1.1 – Legislation that relates to handling information in social care settings are; Data Protection Act 1998‚ Freedom of Information Act 2000 and Health and Social Care Act 2008 – Essential standards. Codes of practice that relates to handling information in social care settings include; General Social Care Council (GSCC)‚ Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and the local or internal Codes of Practice such as code of practise
Premium Tour de Georgia UCI race classifications Data Protection Act 1998
Describe the effects of managed care on physician’s practices. Do you see these effects as positive or negative? Why? Some effects are negatively affecting the care that physicians are able to provide their patients. In some patients are being denied health care coverage for health services by health plan providers because the provider does not believe that a severity of an illness is noticeable. For example: A teen tells his/her physician that they feel suicidal‚ but the mental health patient
Premium Health care Health care provider Health insurance
Existential Therapy and Its Potential Applications Lorraine G. Daddario La Salle University Author Note [Include any grant/funding information and a complete correspondence address.] Abstract As a philosophically based model‚ existential therapy offers a fresh humanistic approach to psychotherapy‚ focusing on the overarching themes of human existence: inevitable death‚ freedom and its corresponding responsibility‚ existential isolation‚ and finding meaning in life. Through a genuine and authentic
Premium Existentialism Meaning of life Existential therapy
Explain the effects of five different life stages on the development of an individual. In today’s society it is almost impossible to grow up without being affected by the things around us. During an individual’s development there are five main key factors that affect them. These include: * Genetic factors * Socio- economic factors * Biological factors * Lifestyle factors * Environmental factors To begin with‚ there are 23 chromosomes in each cell found in the nucleus. It
Premium Genetics
15.09.14 Unit 520: Recruitment and selection within health and social care settings. Outcome 1: Understand the recruitment and selection processes in health and social care settings. 1.1 Explain the impact on selection and recruitment processes‚ in own setting of: 1.2 Explain circumstances when it is necessary to seek specialist expertise in relation to recruitment and selection. Answers: 1.1 & 1.2 In health and social care the recruitment and selection process is that‚ initial employment is conditional
Premium Recruitment Job description Employment
In 1991 Field found that the time spent in full-time day care was positively correlated to the number of friends children had when they went to school. Yet this might be due to more outgoing children attend day-care and therefore are more sociable‚ compared to shy‚ unsociable children who inherited their temperament from their shy mothers who would prefer to keep care for their kids at home. Clark Stewart et al studied a hundred and fifty children in 1994. They found children who went to day-car
Premium Psychology Developmental psychology Child