PROMOTE GOOD PRACTICE IN HANDLING INFORMATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SETTINGS LEARNING OUTCOME 1 UNDERSTAND REQUIREMENTS FOR HANDLING INFORMATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SETTINGS The following are current legislation and codes of practice that relate to handling information in health and social care. They also summarise the main points of legal requirements for handling information. • THE DATA PROTECTION ACT 1998 – The Data Protection Act 1998 is a piece of legislation which defines
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Laura Mealer 4/11/12 Essay #9 Stigma: Obesity The fat stigma is becoming a global problem according to an article in the New York Times by Tara Parker-Pope. “Dr. Brewis and her colleagues recently completed a multicountry study intended to give a snapshot of the international zeitgeist about weight and body image‚”(NY times). ‘The findings were troubling‚ suggesting that negative perceptions about people who are overweight may soon become the cultural norm in some countries‚ including
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UNIT 307- PROMOTE GOOD PRACTICE IN HANDLING INFORMATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SETTINGS OUTCOME 1- 1.1- IDENTIFY LEGISLATION AND CODES OF PRACTICE THAT RELATE TO HANDLING INFORMATION IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE The Data Protection Act 1998 (2000). This Act gives the individual‚ the right to see recorded information about them. The Human Rights Act 1998 details the right to a private life. The Health and Social Care Act 2008. This Act established the Care Quality Commission as
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Promote good practice in handling information in health and social care settings. 1.1 Organisations that handle confidential health and social care information have to ensure that it is held securely and shared appropriately. A number of laws‚ principles and obligations govern how organisations should handle this information. The Health and Social Care Act 2012 gave us powers to advise organisations on how to handle confidential information securely. The Data Protection Act 1998 is a piece of legislation
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Matias CIC‚ NCRW‚ JCTC American Management Association New York • Atlanta • Brussels • Chicago • Mexico City • San Francisco Shanghai • Tokyo • Toronto • Washington‚ D.C. Knockout Answers to Tough Interview Questions The Ultimate Guide to Handling the New Competency-Based Interview Style Special discounts on bulk quantities of AMACOM books are available to corporations‚ professional associations‚ and other organizations. For details‚ contact Special Sales Department‚ AMACOM‚ a division
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SOCIAL STIGMA Social stigma is the extreme disapproval of (or discontent with) a person or group on socially characteristic grounds that are perceived‚ and serve to distinguish them‚ from other members of a society. Stigma may then be affixed to such a person‚ by the greater society‚ who differs from their cultural norms.Social stigma can result from the perception (rightly or wrongly) of mental illness‚ physical disabilities‚ diseases such as leprosy‚ illegitimacy‚ sexual orientation‚ gender identity
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Stigma is based by society’s condemnation of one’s beliefs‚ characteristics and behaviours which do not fit in with social norms. Mental illness has been stigmatised in a negative way as people believe they are violent‚ uncontrollable and incompetent people. Society’s understanding of mental illness is highly limited and there is a need to learn to understand what stigma means and how they can help to assist and influence the recovery process. The key aspects discussed are that of understanding stigma
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Abstract Help seeking stigma within this study is known to be a major barrier that keeps people from seeking out psychological help. Self-compassion on the other hand is an action that requires and focuses on the way one treats oneself that evolves within the act of kindness and understanding. Meaning that being nonjudgmental to one’s own person means holding no judgments a factor that contributes as stated in this study is linked with the reduction of stigma. Overall this study focuses on the
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Stigma of Mental Illness Among the Military Michal Jacobson Stern College for Women Yeshiva University Abstract: The present review addresses the perceived stigma associated with admitting mental illness and seeking mental health treatment. Research on the public stigma associated with mental illness is reviewed‚ indicating that the public generates stereotypes of mental illness‚ which may lead to discrimination of those individuals with mental illness. The internalization of these public beliefs
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Breaking The Social Stigma Anxiety disorders are being diagnosed at an increasing rate in the present day‚ and the seriousness of such illnesses is slowly but surely being accepted by more people. Such is the novelty of this situation that there are still a number of people who consider such disorders to simply be part of life turned into an illness for the sake of keeping people in a job. Although these people are becoming fewer in number‚ they still exist in enough places to make anxiety disorders
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