Title Understand person centred approaches in adult social care settings Ref 27 Level 2 Credit value 4 Learning outcomes The learner will: Assessment criteria The learner can: 1. Understand person centred approaches for care and support 1.1 Define person-centred values 1.2 Explain why it is important to work in a way that embeds person centred values 2. Understand how to implement a person centred approach in an adult social care setting 2.1 Describe how to find out the history‚ preferences
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Surrey Vocational Training Centre PERFORMANCE EVIDENCE RECORD Candidate Name: Unit Titles: Promote the application of person centred approaches in health and social care Evidence ref(s): Unit number(s): 4223-305 Evidence ref(s): Unit number(s): 4223-305 Use this form to record details of activities (tick as appropriate) * observed by your assessor * seen by expert witness * seen by witness ◙ Candidate / reflective account * case study Date of Activity:
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1.1. Define person-centred values Person-centred values: -treating people as individuals -supporting people to access their rights -supporting people to exercise choice -making sure people have privacy if they want it -supporting people to be as independent as possible -treating people with dignity and respect -recognising that working with people is a partnership rather than a relationship controlled by professionals Person-centred care has its focus on the person with an illness
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Question 1 0 out of 1 points removeo‚ first person plural present passive subjunctive Answer Selected Answer: removamur Response Feedback: male‚ please check the conjugation of your verb and how to form the present subjunctive again. Question 2 0 out of 1 points committo‚ third plural present active subjunctive Answer Selected Answer: committent Response Feedback: male‚ please check the conjugation of your verb and how
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In "Person and Community in African Traditional Thought" (1984)‚ Menkiti argued that‚ in Africa‚ the community had priority over the individual. He distinguished between Western views‚ which generally hold that a person is a lone individual‚ and African views‚ in which a person is defined "by reference to the environing community‚" quoting John Mbiti’s statement‚ "I am because we are‚ and since we are‚ therefore I am‚" to support his thesis (p. 171). According to Menkiti‚ "as far as Africans are
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corporation is an ‘artificial person’ created by law.” Discuss. Introduction A company or a corporation is an artificial person not natural person. Artificial person are such as are created and devised by human laws for the purpose of society and government which are called corporation. Such artificial persons‚ known as corporation‚ possess similar rights and owe similar obligation as natural person‚ but have no physical or natural existence. The law in creating legal persons always does so by personifying
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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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at‘Despite the use of the first person narrative in The Reluctant Fundamentalist‚ Changez remains a stranger to us in the novel.’ Do you agree? In the novel The Reluctant Fundamentalist‚ Mohsin Hamid has used the first person narrative to let Changez tells the reader a story. We are shown the way that first person narrative only tells one side of the story‚ in this case‚ it is only Changez telling the story and speaking for the American and this creates the reader with no other perspectives of
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The second-person narrative is a narrative mode in which the protagonist or another main character is referred to by employment of second-person personal pronouns and other kinds of addressing forms‚ for example the English second-person pronoun "you"or "your". Example: You are not the kind of guy who would be at a place like this at this time of the morning. But here you are‚ and you cannot say that the terrain is entirely unfamiliar‚ although the details are fuzzy. —Opening lines of Jay McInerney’s
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them in at least 50 countries living amidst war and persecution. They have little legal or physical protection and a very uncertain future – outcasts in their own countries. Bureaucratically‚ they are described as IDPs – or „internally displaced persons.‟ In the real world‚ they are civilians‚ mostly women and children‚ who have been forced to abandon their homes because of conflict or persecution to seek safety elsewhere. The idea and the phenomenon of internal displacement are not recent. According
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