Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Block 1 - Care in Families
- Are they a carer?
- Over 35 hrs per week
- Not earn more than £95 per week.
- Caring for someone registered disabled
- Interdependance - In
case of Ann and Angus:
Angus provides home,
Ann provides services
and care for
Angus...reciprocating
care.
- Be over 16 and not a registered student.
- Case Study: Ann and Angus.
- Meets Direct Gov's : ...someone who looks after a
friend/ relative or neighbour who needs support because
of illness, age or disability. Does not apply to
professional care worker. (2006) Parker and Lawton
1994 - Performs personal serices (washing/toileting),
physical labour, gives medicine, and/or keeps
company..".
- Caring for relative:
- Positives for carer:
Sense of
accomplishment. -
Loyalty - Knowing
the person who you
are caring for -
Carer's allowance -
Closeness and
bonding -
reciprocation.
- Positives for person
receiving care:
Knowing the carer -
loyalty and love less
risk abuse -
closeness.
- Negatives for
carer: Sense of
duty - Loss of
dignity -
embarrassment for
personal care -
reduced social life -
isolation - feeling
trapped - feeling of
being taken for
granted - Injury -
pressure from other
family members -
unable to pursue a
career.
- Negatives for
the person
receiving care:
Loss of dignity
-
embarrassment
at personal
care - restricted
access to the
outside world -
stress for
family
members could
lead to a
breakdown in
the
relationship.
- Case Study: Mrs
Bliss p13, talks of
strain of caring for
relative.
- K101 principles of care:
- Maximising potential
- Right to have a voice and be heard.
- Respect for beliefs and preferences
- Right to appropriate services.
- Rights to privacy and confidentiality.
- Technical terms:
- Biomedical approach:
traditional approach where
doctor diagnoses what is
medically wrong and then
prescribes treatment.
- Sick Role: Illness is not
regarded as the person's
fault - exempt from
responsibility from normal
activities - must see health
professional and follow
advice. Must also stop any
other activities.
- Assessment: process of determining
needs. Care package: services that meet
the needs identified in the assessment.
Care manager: the person responsible for
managing the care package, budgets,
plans and organisations to deliver care.
Care plan: record of what someone can
expect. p121
- Maslow's hierarchy of
needs. State that as in the
pyramid, the needs on a
lower block must be met
before moving to the next
set of needs/wants. i.e.
needs for air and water must
be met before the need for
shelter becomes a real
issue. p205 (1990)
- WHO definition of
health p108 (1946). A
carer is someone who
provides care for
more than 35 hrs per
week.
- Parker and Lawton
1994 - Identify what
carers do - personal
services, washing,
physical labour,
administer medicine,
be company for.
- Health care - free at
point of delivery i.e.
hospital care,
inpatient.
- Social care - is
means tested.
- Acts;
- Carer's recognition
Act 1995 - First to
recognise carers.
- Carer's Equal
Opportunity act
2004 Allows
carer's an
assessment of
their needs as
well.
- Townsend. 1950's
Bethnal Green
- Changing roles of family networks
- 6m family carer's in UK
- Families living further appart
- 58% women carers. 42%
men, but seen as a
predominantly female role.