Person Centered Care Essay

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    Person Centered Care

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    the art and science section contact: Gwen Clarke, art and science editor, Nursing Standard, The Heights, 59-65 Lowlands Road, Harrow-on-the-Hill, Middlesex HA1 3AW. email: gwen.clarke@rcnpublishing.co.uk Person-centred care: Principle of Nursing Practice D Manley K et al (2011) Person-centred care: Principle of Nursing Practice D. Nursing Standard. 25, 31, 35-37. Date of acceptance: February 7 2011. Summary This is the fifth article in a nine-part series describing the Principles of Nursing Practice

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    At West View Nursing Home, the idea of person-centered care is drilled into each new staff member’s brain at their first interview and orientation. It is the principle that guides all of the work here, no matter if you are a janitor, social worker, nurse, dietician, etc. Some examples of the general principles associated with this type of intervention and care are that the needs of the client have priority and social services exist to benefit him or her, everyone has their own strengths and weaknesses

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    Person-Centered Care Patient-centered care is based on your health care needs as a whole. The aim is to provide you to be more involved in your care. This means that all health care providers require good communication skills to successfully meet your needs to the best possible standard, in a safe and respectful way (Reynolds, 2009). Person-centered Care consists of providing you with dignity, respect and compassion and ensure that human rights that are cherished within the NHS and towards your

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    designated. A person should not be judged for their behavior, they should be allowed to make as many choices as possible (or given two options to pick from), and their strengths should be a primary focus when giving care. I have taken a particular liking to working with residents with dementia and Alzheimer’s, and I make sure to use this theory in every conversation I have with them. I am amazed at the impact that I can have on these individuals that I have not known for very long by using person-centered

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    Patient or Person Centered Care focuses on values and principles addressing; knowing the resident as an individual, resident are more important than tasks, self-determination is a right of residents, environment reflects residents’ preferences, environment reflects a home, and care for the body, mind and spirit (Touhy, Jett, Boscart & McCleary, 2012). “Inherent in a person focus is the notion that attention to patients' problems in the context of their multimorbidity is at least as important as appropriate

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    According to “How to…develop a person-centered plan of care for older people” by Adrian Ashurst that care plan is defined as a written statement with patient focused needs to care all aspects of holistic approach. Patient care centers spend a lot of time to frame out comprehensive plan of care. Upon admission, all available accurate information in the form of objective and subjective is collected to initiate process of gathering relevant information about patient’s disease process. If needed, patient’s

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    Person-centred care is a comprehensive approach that includes the physical, emotional, and social aspects of an individual's well-being in addition to the diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. The code of conduct in healthcare is a declaration of the moral duty of placing patients' health and dignity first. The NMBA standards represent how the profession's ongoing knowledge, experience, and ethical principles, form the foundation of nursing practice. These standards specify what is expected

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    will explore how professional issues impact and promote the delivery of  person centred care and will also discuss the importance of communication and therapeutic relationships whilst in practice. Person centred care is defined as treating people as individuals by respecting their rights, developing a therapeutic relationship and building mutual trust, (McCormack and Cance, 2010). The professional issues discussed throughout will be privacy, competence and confidentiality. This is a case study that

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    Carl rogers first pioneered humanistic psychology believing person centred care had three components; warmth, empathy and genuineness. Since 2000 healthcare’s changed and the term ‘person centred care’ is now pivotal to policies and law (Pearce, 2011). The Health Foundation (2014), states ‘person-centred care’ has no single definition, where as the Nursing and Midwifery Council (2015) (NMC), defined person-centred care as “care tailored to the individual needs and choices of the service user, taking

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    Effective communication through person centred care are essential for health profession specifically in nursing care. Mueller (2016) noted that it occurs mainly through transaction models where the patient and the nurse are on common grounds through mutual understanding. The competent communication practice of Person centred care allows the nurse to recognise patients as people and not by their illness. Person centred care satisfies patients by providing informational support to them and their families

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