Care planning to meet the care needs of an individual (P4‚ M3‚ D2) What are the potential differences in Sally’s care needs at all the different life stages? Childhood: In Sally’s childhood‚ she grew up in mining town which may have been detrimental to her health due to the dust particles and other substance that could have been brought up from the mine‚ she has stated that when she was growing up‚ that there was ice on the inside of the window‚ that the house was cold and damp‚ and that she remembers
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about how upset she was about leaving her job‚ This not only set her up for a financial loss but over time isolated her. Without anybody else to interact with other than her step father‚ Ann was in denial about her living situation & the level of care she was giving. Quite often people don ’t see how much their doing when theres nobody there to point it out. This evidentially meant Ann would receive no real support until she was at "breaking point". In the first stages of caring Ann was new to her
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Introduction to Duty of Care in Health‚ Social Car or Children and Young Peoples Settings UNIT 5 1.1 Being a support worker means I have a responsibility of duty of care‚ which I am to adhere to at all times. This responsibility is a legal obligation as part of my job role. If these standards of care are not met I can put the service user/s in jeopardy of harm. The duty of care should be my self acting in the best interest of the individual at all times which should not be detrimental to the
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The Health and Social Care Act 2012 (c 7) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It is the most extensive reorganisation of the structure of the National Health Service in England to date.[1] It proposes to abolish NHS primary care trusts (PCTs) and Strategic Health Authorities (SHAs). Thereafter‚ £60 to £80 billion of "commissioning"‚ or health care funds‚ will be transferred from the abolished PCTs to several hundred "clinical commissioning groups"‚ partly run by the general practitioners
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Contents Page 2 – Introduction Care Practice and Provision Page 3 - Overview and AO1 Page 5 – AO2 Page 6 – AO3 Page 8 – AO4 Page 9 – Case Studies Anatomy and Physiology in Practice Page 12 – Overview Page 13 – Revision Schedule Child Development Page 16 – Overview and AO1 Page 17 – AO2 Page 19 – AO3 Page 20 – AO4 Page 23 – Case study General Page 32 – References Page 33 – Coursework Mark Schemes Page 41 - Glossary Page 45 – Keeping track – record your marks here! Page 46 -
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comfortable to talk to you about their personal issues. For example in a profession like counselling‚ the service user will need to meet and become acquainted with the counsellor before they will feel at ease and ready to open up. In some health or social care settings‚ such a counselling‚ you may have a mentor whom you see if you
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Writing Styles In Health And Social Care There are three different styles of writing in health and social care; journalistic‚ Scientific and reflective. Each is different in terms of style‚ presentation‚ format‚ language and structure. Journalistic writing is in the style of formal writing and is descriptive as it is describing what has happened so the audience can understand fully. It is often in the format of paragraphs of the relevant sections and includes headlines and subheadings which could
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B1 Discuss the skills the practitioner requires to effectively communication in a social care setting. Practitioners need many skills to have effective communication in a social care setting. The first thing they need to have the effective communication is to stay professional. The second skill required would be listening because then you are giving them the respect and you are building a stronger relationship with each other by respecting of their opinion and views. The fourth skill would be having
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Confidentiality is information kept about a person that people can not access except the teachers and staff in the unit or multi agenys teams if necessary. Information about a child or parent such as name‚ address‚ and medical information should be kept in a safe place where just the people that need to access it can‚ such as in a filing cabinet locked with a key or on a computer with a password. Each child care setting will have policies and procedures because of the Data Protection Act 1998. The staff within
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HEA 9083 LEADERSHIP IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE LEARNING OUTCOMES 1 Good leadership is vitally important in the current climate of health and social care. Leadership skills will be needed to drive forward an ever changing structure and service development as set out in numerous development plans and Government white papers (Department of Health‚ 2003‚ 2008‚ 2009‚ 2011. Leadership Academy‚ 2012). The style of leadership required to carry out such tasks is frequently debated and lamented‚ but it would
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