Enriched Care Planning for People with Dementia: A Good Practice Guide to Delivering Person-Centred Care

Front Cover
Jessica Kingsley Publishers, Jul 15, 2009 - Medical - 176 pages

The correlation between 'disengagement' and illness in people with dementia living in long-term care settings is becoming more widely recognised, and developing and adapting front-line staff responses to the changing needs of individuals is a crucial factor in addressing this problem.

This book presents a complete practical framework for whole person assessment, care planning and review of persons with dementia or signs of dementia (including those with learning disabilities) who are in need of, or already receiving, health and/or social support. The book provides photocopiable assessment forms, guidelines for carrying out the assessment, and suggestions for tailored interventions based on the profile that emerges from the assessment process. The authors also include a clear explanation of the five theoretical components of dementia that are considered in the assessment: health, biography, personality, neurological impairment and social psychology. This good practice guide will provide a step up to the challenge of providing person centred care as a minimum standard rather than just an ideal.

Care workers in residential settings and social workers assessing clients for their support requirements will find this an essential resource.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements
10
Foreword
11
Introduction
13
Chapter 1 What is Enriched Care Planning?
15
Chapter 2 Life Story
23
Chapter 3 Lifestyle and Future Wishes
38
Chapter 4 Personality
56
Chapter 5 Health
64
Chapter 7 Cognitive Ability
114
Chapter 8 Life at the Moment
133
Chapter 9 Implementing and Reviewingthe Enriched Care Plan
141
Useful Resources
147
Templates
150
References
170
Index
172
BACK COVER
176

Chapter 6 Capacity for Doing
104

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About the author (2009)

Hazel May is a state registered occupational therapist with a Master's Degree in Philosophy and Health Care. She currently works for the Bradford Dementia Group as a dementia care practice development consultant and trainer based from her home in Wiltshire. Paul Edwards is also a dementia care practice development consultant and trainer with the Bradford Dementia Group. Paul is a mental health nurse by profession, and previously spent many years developing person centred practice in the NHS. He lives in Leicestershire. Professor Dawn Brooker is the Director of the University of Worcester Association for Dementia Studies. Professionally qualified as a clinical psychologist, she has over twenty-five years' experience working to improve the quality of care for people with dementia as a clinician, as a service manager and as an academic.

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