Task a 103 1. Explain how individuals with dementia may communicate through their behaviour. Dementia sufferers communicate in many different ways. They may not be able to speak but they can communicate non-verbally with positive or negative behaviour. They can also communicate using body language and through posture. One service user who was blind was hard to settle‚ because he couldn’t see it was hard to communicate‚ he was unable to express himself verbally and he was very anxious and
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Understand and Meet the Nutritional Requirements of Individuals with Dementia 1.1 Describe how cognitive‚ functional and emotional changes associated with dementia can affect eating‚ drinking and nutrition Cognitive behaviour is dysfunctional emotions and behaviours caused by damage in brain affecting part of the brain responsible for memory and all that we learn from birth- how to talk‚ eat etc. This means that person with dementia can forget how important it is to eat and drink. They also may lose
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through an individual’s body language and facial expressions‚ and people can be trained to perceive microexpressions. Microexpressions can also be utilized when trying to understand a person’s true intent‚ especially when it comes to lying. Deception can be detected through the analysis of microexpressions. To fully understand the significance microexpressions it is important to distinguish the differences between body language‚ facial expressions‚ and microexpressions. Body language is defined as
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date and regularly retested or reviewed to ensure that I am refreshed with everything. 3. Describe potential conflicts or dilemmas that may arise between the duty of care and an individual’s rights. In out care setting the individuals have got dementia so they may not have the ability to judge what is good for them and what is not. In those cases it is our responsibility and job as carers and as a team to provide them what we judge is best for them in some other
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Mind-Body Interventions: Aromatherapy Amanda Watson Alternative Approaches to Disease HSC 3189 Brett Lieberman August 5‚ 2012 Mind-Body Interventions: Aromatherapy Aromatherapy is the therapeutic use of essential oils and to know what aromatherapy is‚ one must know that essential oils are the steam distillates derived from the aromatic plants (Freeman‚ 2009). Aromatherapy dates back to the era in which medicine was first discovered and can be labeled as preventative care. It
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Rene Descartes’s said that bodies are not minds and minds are not bodies‚ more likely there is two different kind of contemporary bodies and minds. When defining the characteristics of mind it is cogitation and the bodies is a spatial extension. Rene Descartes argued that mind is a thinking but not extendable thing and body is extended non thinking thing. Body is a material entity we spend time decorating our appearances and the mind is the source where our creativeness is coming from. It also helps
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Music stimulates brain growth and productive function. It is instinct to make and enjoy music in homo sapiens‚ it does not get wiped from memory by diseases like Parkinson’s or Dementia‚ it was been known to help children with ADHD and ADD pay attention‚ Charles Darwin and other specialists support the idea that it was used to help us evolve and bond throughout our existence. Music is a way for people to transmit emotions‚ feelings‚ ideas‚ and motivation better than words can do; almost as if it
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The Effects of Soda Pop on the Body Angela Fugate Fortis College English 101 August 27‚ 2013 “I’ll take a large Coke please.” Words I find myself saying way too habitually and way too often. Opening the refrigerator and grabbing a soda pop is easy to do in our fast paced society of today. It takes too long to get a cup out of the cabinet‚ grab the milk or juice out of the refrigerator‚ and pour. At least this is my way of thinking. I want something that is quick and easy. Americans
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Human Body and Water XXXXXXX University of Phoenix/ Axia College SCI 241 July 1‚ 2009 The Human Body and Water The Most Important Nutrient Of all vitamins and minerals in the human body water is the most important. It is the one essential nutrient that the human body cannot survive without. The adult human body is comprised of approximately 60% water‚ the body of a small child‚ infants for example is comprised of approximately 70% water. Water is found throughout the body in
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The Mind-Body Problem The mind-body problem can be broken down into a series of questions. What is the mind? What is the body? Do the mind and body co-exist‚ or does the mind only exist in the body? Or does the body only exist in the mind? If both the mind and body exist‚ there could be a number of types of relationships. Maybe the mind affects the body. Maybe the body affects the mind‚ or maybe the mind and body both affect each other. The later possibility is called Dualist Interactionism‚ and
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