Person-centred 2.1 A physical disability is any disability that affects the physical function of one or more limbs. Physical disabilities can be either congenital or acquired after birth due to an accident or disease. 2.2 Describe the following terminology used in relation to physical disability: Congenital Acquired Neurological A congenital disability is a medical condition which you are born with‚ congenital disorders are caused by development problems with the fetus before birth
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Person centred is about providing care and support that is centred or focused on an individual and their needs. We are all individual and just because two people might have the same medical condition‚ for example‚ Dementia‚ it does not mean that they require the same care and support. You will need to develop a clear understanding about the individuals you are working with. This includes their likes and dislikes‚ their culture‚ their needs‚ their means of communication‚ their friends and family and
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Social Care Unit 7 Title: Understand person-centred approaches in adult social care settings Candidate: Kenya Virginia Novillo Andrade Date: 17/07/2014 Questions and Answers 1 Understand person-centred approaches for care and support 1.1 Define person-centred values 1.2 Explain why it is important to work in a way that embeds person-centred values 2. Understand how to implement a person-centred approach in an adult social care setting 2.1 Describe how to find out the history‚ preferences
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5th November 2013 Essay 1: ‘Evaluate the claim that Person–Centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients’. In this essay I will look at the benefits and the disadvantages of person-centred therapy and consider whether it provides sufficient tools for the therapist to be effective in the treatment of the client. Looking at the underlying theory (self-actualisation‚ organismic self‚ conditions of worth etc)‚ and the originators of it‚ namely Abraham Maslow and
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Briefly describe the key principles of person centred care and demonstrate how you implemented person centred care in practice‚ Illustrate with examples. Use academic literature and the insight that it provides to inform your understanding of the key principles of person centred care. Person centred care can be viewed in many different aspects. The eight key principles of nursing practice found by the Royal College of Nursing (2011) include‚ dignity‚ responsibility‚ safety‚ choice‚ communication
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Implement person centred approaches in a health social care setting. Written by Dave Andrews. 1.1 define person centred values. Person centred values are there to ensure that the person using the service has all decisions about care ect. Made around them and their needs. 1.2 explain why it is important to work in a way that embeds person centred approaches to establish the needs and wishes of the individual and make sure these are met. This also means that the individual will feel empowered
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Individualised Person Centred Approach to Nursing Care with and for Older People This essay explores the idea of Person Centred Care and the significance it has in caring for an older patient. Issues related to patients incapable of taking part in their care will also be discussed. Each and every patient should be treated holistically and individually to their own personal needs as part of any nursing care plan. This essay will show this is especially evident in the person centred approach to caring
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Person Centred Risk Every opportunity contains risks – a life without risk is a life without opportunities‚ often without quality and without change. Traditional methods of risk assessment are full of charts and scoring systems‚ but the person‚ their objectives‚ dreams and life seem to get lost somewhere in the pages of tick boxes and statistics. A person centred approach seeks to focus on people ’s rights to have the lifestyle that they chose‚ including the right to make ’bad ’ decisions
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Explore the Person Centred approach in relation to counselling practice The roots of the Person Centred approach‚ now considered a founding work in the Humanistic school of psychotherapies‚ began formally with Carl Rogers in the 1950’s. Dealing in the ’here and now’ and not on the childhood origins of the client’s problems‚ basic assumptions of the Person Centred approach state that clients are essentially trustworthy; that they have a vast potential for understanding themselves and resolving
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Unit HSC026 Person Centred Care Question one (1:1) Person centred values consists of patients being involved and included in every aspect of their care. It means working together in partnership to develop a set of approaches or care pathway that focuses on the patient’s needs. These approaches should promote the core values such as promoting independence‚ rights‚ choices whilst showing respect and maintaining their confidentiality and privacy. Question two (1:2) It is important to
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