CT307 Understand Person-Centred Approaches in Adult Social Care Settings Person centred planning is crucial to providing quality care and support. It helps support workers find out what is important to the person they support and enables services/support plans to be built around what matters most to that individual. Person-Centred values • Treating people as individuals • Supporting people to access their rights • Supporting people to exercise choice • Making sure people have privacy
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Describe any one approach to identity. Discuss how this approach can help explain the identities of people with disabilities. Identity has been defined as‚ "a person ’s essential‚ continuous self‚ the internal subjective concept of oneself as an individual" (Reber‚1995‚ p.355). Identity is a complex field and‚ as a consequence‚ psychologists have devised a number of theories to help people to understand it. This essay will describe an approach to identity called Social Identity Theory (SIT) which
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Can a robot be a person? Or should it be said‚ can Andrew be a person? Andrew is simply NDR-114: an androgynous robot designed to handle household chores‚ child education‚ servant work‚ and anything else as ordered by humans‚ the Martin family. It only got its name when Little Miss stumbled over the word "android"‚ and mistaken it as something else and said "Andrew" instead. As Andrew begins to experience emotions and creative thought‚ the Martin family soon discovers they own a very different and
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Behaviourist approach 1.a) Outline two assumptions of the Behaviourist approach [4 marks] One assumption of the behaviourist approach is classical conditioning‚ where behaviours are learnt through association. This assumption was developed by a psychologist called Pavlov‚ through his research into dogs. After conditioning the neutral stimulus (the bell)‚ it produced a conditioned response‚ (salivation). This is because the dog had associated the bell with food. Another assumption of the behaviourist
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space for a client could be described as a place or space in which a client feels secure and free to express him/herself in a real‚ true and open way. This could mean a number of things to different clients‚ it is very individual. What makes a person feel safe? The list could include some or all of the following; Not feeling judged or criticised by the counsellor or that the counsellor is likely to not accept you if you share something ‘bad’ Feeling that the counsellor accurately
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Unit 4222-373 Support person-centred thinking and planning (LD 302) Outcome 1 Understand the principles and practice of person-centred thinking‚ planning and reviews‚ 1 Explain what person-centred thinking is‚ and how it relates to person-centred reviews and person-centred planning - This is when you as a carer must find a balance between what is important from and for the person. Person-centred planning is when you have to reflect on their capabilities and what support they may require now
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Unit 207 Understand person centred approaches in adult social care settings. Outcome 1- Understand centred approaches for care and support. T/C 1.1 + DIP 1 person centred values means the people who we have supported are able to be involved and are included in every way aspect of their care and support an example may be their needs‚ assessments‚ care and delivery + support planning. T/C 1.2 + DIP 2 Its important to work in a way that embeds person centred values because care practices should always
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........................................7 CHAPTER 1 RISK MANAGEMENT ............................................................8 1.1 The Definition of Risk ............................................................... 8 1.2 Risk in Business Activity......................................................... 10 1.2.1 Types of Risk ..................................................................................... 10 1.2.2 Methods of Risk Evaluation...........................................
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Taking Risks What I Already Known/What I Want to Know While reading Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air‚ I began to wonder why individuals take extreme risks. Over the course of this novel‚ a team of highly trained mountain climbers attempts to climb Mount Everest in 1996. Several die‚ get injured‚ and go missing. Death becomes very familiar to the team of climbers. In the book‚ Hall and Hansen get stranded‚ Hansen runs out of supplemental oxygen and cannot continue; Fischer also gets stranded‚ Hansen
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their illness or medical condition. It views disabled people as needing to be cured or cared for‚ and justifies the way in which disabled people have been excluded from society in the past. The disabled person is the problem‚ and this shapes society view of disabled people. Being viewed in this way can make someone with a disability feel as though they are a failure in society and they would be given a diagnosis and label. For example; the main focus of a child with Downs Syndrome would be their impairment
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