"Explain why person centred values are more important and how they influence social care work" Essays and Research Papers

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    and encouraging‚ each time you try to understand because you really care‚ my heart begins to grow wings‚ very small wings‚ very feeble wings‚ but wings! Extract from Poem Please Hear What I am not Saying. Charles C. Finn This Critique of Person Centred Counselling offers an insight into The Person Centred Approach developed by Carl Rogers. I will firstly introduce Rogers and his influences. An exploration of Person Centred Counselling will follow examining Philosophical Principals‚ Key Concepts

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    Promote person centered approaches in health and social care 1.1 Explain how and why person centered values must influence all aspects of health and social care work: Because everybody has different belief systems‚ needs‚ disabilities‚ cultures‚ religious beliefs. Everybody has their own person centered care plans that help us approach them in an individual way‚ even if we know how to assist clients we still try to offer those choices and independence. We need to make sure we do not push

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    11 Social Care Theory for Practice Assessment 1 Outcome 1 ALISON HERRIOT Values 1) The values that I hold at this point in my life have developed over the years there have been many influences like family‚ friends‚ work‚ and my life experiences have played a part in the development of these values. Values are a guide that I feel I need to have in order for me to continue my life in the right direction and be as happy as it can be. These are some of the values and what influences I feel

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    I am presenting this essay as an insight to how values and principles influence practice in a Social Care setting. The source of each individuals values stem from primary socialisation. I‚ myself have been influenced by my parents values and their endeavour to make choices for me and my siblings within a family setting. Those particular values I practiced and developed into my adult life leading to fundamental approaches which I have carried through‚ with some adaptations along the way influenced

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    district nurses visited on a weekly basis to renew dressings on her legs‚ due to DVT’s‚ she had no hearing problems and could read the Bolton news without spectacles‚ after I had been visiting Mary for about 12 months‚ I noticed that she was becoming more forgetful and although she could remember everything about her childhood‚ her short term memory was getting worse. On a morning visit Mary opened the door and seemed distressed‚ she said come in‚ sit down‚ I’ve got something to tell you‚ Mary had

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    Compare and contrast two counselling theories covered on this module. Discuss the strengths and limitations of the two models. In this essay I am going to explore two multicultural theories which are person centered therapy and Gestalt therapy. I will start by discussing the two perspectives in relations to then illustrate the similarities and differences between them. During this time I will also be identifying the strengths and limitations of both of the models. The Gestalt approach to therapy

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    Professional‚ Legal and Ethical issues in person-centred care For the purpose of this assignment the student will be discussing and analysing the professional‚ legal and ethical issues that influenced how person-centred care was delivered to a patient in an acute psychiatric hospital where the student was working. In accordance with the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) (2010) the patient will be referred to as Sarah to uphold confidentiality. During a shift at the hospital the student attended

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    child and youth health essay INTRO Bringing home a new baby can be an exciting time for many parents but it can also be a time of stress and anxiety. Parents naturally want to do the best for their newborns and endeavour to care for them safely through infancy ‚ childhood and beyond. Unfortunately‚ around 80 infants die from sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) in Australia each year‚ this equates to approximately 0.4 deaths per 1000 births (SIDSandkids 2012" ABS 2008). SIDS and Kids Australia

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    difficulties through Person -Centred counselling. I am going to commence with my client’s presenting issues‚ and include any perceived risks. I will also be exploring the client’s presenting issues in relation to Rogers’ personality theory. Following on from this‚ I am going to discuss how an effective therapeutic alliance was established with my peer‚ and reflect on how this relationship developed throughout the counselling process. This will include an analysis of the interventions used‚ and how these interventions

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    claim that Person-Centred Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients‚ one must look at the theoretical concepts of person-centred therapy (PCT) and its underlying philosophical influences. The PCT approach was developed during the 1940’s and 1950’s by an American psychologist Carl Rogers‚ now known as Rogerian counselling; he proposed new humanistic ideas for counselling which moved away from the doctor/patient relationship. PCT emphasises person to person relationship

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