Briefly describe the key principles of person centred care and demonstrate how you implemented person centred care in practice‚ Illustrate with examples. Use academic literature and the insight that it provides to inform your understanding of the key principles of person centred care. Person centred care can be viewed in many different aspects. The eight key principles of nursing practice found by the Royal College of Nursing (2011) include‚ dignity‚ responsibility‚ safety‚ choice‚ communication
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Name: Lucy Banner Student Number: 1201133 Award: Adult Nursing Cohort Number: 213 Personal Tutor: Jane Banks Module code: 4NH007 Title of Assignment: Exploring Patient Centred Care from Nursing Perspective Date of Submission: Named Marker: Robert Preece Number of words: This assessment is my own work‚ which not been completed in collusion with other student’s and complies with University of Wolverhampton plagiarism policy. On a female only respiratory ward in the West
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“The Person-Centred Therapy approach has its limitations when it comes to treating a gambling addiction.” Discuss. In this assignment I am going to discuss what constitutes addictive behaviour in the context of therapeutic work. An evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of Person-Centred Therapy (PCT) will be used to highlight the limitations of this mode of therapy when used for clients with a gambling addiction. Other models of therapy will also be explored in order to ascertain whether
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Explore the Person Centred approach in relation to counselling practice The roots of the Person Centred approach‚ now considered a founding work in the Humanistic school of psychotherapies‚ began formally with Carl Rogers in the 1950’s. Dealing in the ’here and now’ and not on the childhood origins of the client’s problems‚ basic assumptions of the Person Centred approach state that clients are essentially trustworthy; that they have a vast potential for understanding themselves and resolving
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Person- Centred Therapy The Person-Centred Approach developed from the work of the psychologist Dr. Carl Rogers. In 1940s to 1960s‚ Carl Rogers approach to therapy was considered revolutionary. His specialist knowledge didn’t come from a theory but rather from his clinical therapy. Consequently‚ theory came out of practice. Person-Centred Therapy was originally seen as non-directive. The reasoning for that was because Rogers didn’t believe that therapist was the expert. The crucial part of his
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whilst in placement at a Unit for Clients with behaviour and learning needs‚ and associated autistic difficulties. Clients are both sexes and range in age from four to eighteen. It will be undertaken‚ defining person centred care in relation to the incident‚ it will demonstrate awareness to roles and responsibilities of professionals in meeting the needs of the client and it will demonstrate the importance of inter-professional collaboration and discuss the issues that facilitate or act as barriers in
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5th November 2013 Essay 1: ‘Evaluate the claim that Person–Centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients’. In this essay I will look at the benefits and the disadvantages of person-centred therapy and consider whether it provides sufficient tools for the therapist to be effective in the treatment of the client. Looking at the underlying theory (self-actualisation‚ organismic self‚ conditions of worth etc)‚ and the originators of it‚ namely Abraham Maslow and
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Be able to work in a person-centred way 2.1- Work with an individual and others to find out the individual’s history‚ preferences‚ wishes and needs I should refer to any previous files held with regards to that person Social workers/agencies/person involved in placing the individual into our care should provide as much background info as possible‚ (psychical‚ mental‚ social and emotional health‚ medical history‚ behavioural history‚ personal interests so forth)- myself and the rest of my staff
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Implement person centred approaches in a health social care setting. Written by Dave Andrews. 1.1 define person centred values. Person centred values are there to ensure that the person using the service has all decisions about care ect. Made around them and their needs. 1.2 explain why it is important to work in a way that embeds person centred approaches to establish the needs and wishes of the individual and make sure these are met. This also means that the individual will feel empowered
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Person-centred approach - Carl Rogers Person-centred approach is a psychological trend which was invented by Carl Rogers (1902-1987). Carl Rogers was an American psychologist and psychotherapist. His hypothesis was that each person owns a reserved potential of self-understanding and the power to change themselves positively. The task of psychotherapy and helping relationship is to help to mobilize those reserved potentials. The person-centred relationship has three main features: 1. Empathic
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