Greta was heading towards late adulthood and had dementia. It is a condition in which there is a decline in the mental ability which interferes with interferes with daily life. It has some early symptoms which if taken care can prevent getting it severe and worsen the condition. As mentioned‚ Greta had always been an independent woman. She loved doing things on her own and taking care of herself and her family. This trait of her made it difficult for her to accept taking medical help for her condition
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HSC 26 IMPLEMENTING PERSON-centred approaches in health and social care A.C 1.1 Define person-centred values Person centred values means the people whom we support are able to be involved and included in every aspect of their care and support. For example: Their needs Assessements Care delivery and Support planning Person-centred values include: individuality‚ right‚ choice‚ privacy‚ independence‚ dignity‚ respect and partnership. So basically person centred approaches‚ policies and procedures and
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currently 800‚000 people withdementia in the UK. There are over 17‚000 younger people with dementia in the UK. There are over 25‚000 people with dementia from black and minority ethnic groupsin the UK. There will be over a million people with dementia by 2021. Two thirds of people with dementia are women. The proportion of people with dementia doubles for every 5 year age group. One third of people over 95 have dementia. 60‚000 deaths a year are directly attributable to dementia. Delaying the
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between alcohol dementia and dementia is that alcohol dementia is a form of dementia caused by a long term use of alcohol and excessively drinking to the point where the individual suffers from memory loss due to neurological damage to the brain. With dementia there is the person does not suffer from alcohol abuse. Alcohol dementia can cause very serious brain complications and ten percent of patients diagnosed with alcohol dementia have a history of extended alcohol abuse. People that suffer from
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Understand and enable communication Different forms of dementia may affect the way an individual communicates. People with alzheimers and most other types of dementia‚often suffer from short-term memory loss.This means that they may be unable to remember events that have just happened or they may repeat a question after just a few minutes.They may forget names or even forget who people are all together.This can cause communication issues as they may be unaware who they are talking to‚forget earlier
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One theory that I continue to apply at EAO is the use of person-centred approach as you need to let the older adult who is being abused or suspects abuse of a friend decide what they would like to do. The person is the expert of there own life‚ not you as the SSW‚ you are there for support. Ways I have applied this is during calls to the head office from older adults‚ and during training session and fairs when older adults or care takers are discussing issues of elder abuse. Another theory that I
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DESCRIBE SOME OF THE WAYS THAT THE PERSON-CENTRED APPROACH (PCA) DIFFERS TO COGNITIVE BEHAVIOURAL (CBT) AND PSYCHODYNAMIC APPROACHES TO COUNSELLING. In order to be able to say what the differences are between PCT‚ CBT and Psychodynamic approaches to counselling I have first of all set out below a brief summary of all three; Person centred therapy concentrates mainly on the subjective experience of the client and on how they might lose touch with their own organismic experiencing through taking
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Child Centred Environment Child centred environments are environments that are fully focused on the child. They may consist of child size furnishings (Mooney‚ 2006)‚ brightly coloured walls and nicely hung children’s paintings. All these factors contribute to a child’s learning environment. They promote positive interactions thus unknowingly allowing the child to learn languages and other essential life skills. UNICEF (2001) declares that child centred approach identifies that the child’s rights
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4222 - 237 Dementia Awareness Learning outcomes: 1 Understand what dementia is 2 Understand key features of the theoretical models of dementia 3 Know the most common types of dementia and their causes 4 Understand factors relating to an individuals experience of dementia Resources Information and research on different forms of dementia Outcome 1 Write a definition of the term ‘dementia’. O1.1 Dementia is the significant
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Understand person centred approaches in adult social care settings What are Learning Disability Partnership Boards? These are new groups that bring people from different organisations and from the wider community together. Their job is to work to put Valuing People into action locally. People with learning disabilities and carers will be members of the Board. The Partnership Boards will be a way of helping people to work better together. They will be a place where people share important
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