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Published byMadison Bernadette Watkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Kate Swaffer
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27 th International Alzheimer’s Disease International Science Fact or Fiction 7 – 10 th March 2012 London United Kingdom
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Person Centred Care: An Insider’s View
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Services targeted to the masses, rather than the individual...
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Person Centred Care Define us by our assets Speak to us, not about us Work with us, not for us Don’t diminish our symptoms Value us Individualise our support
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We are mothers, fathers, lovers, daughters, wives or husbands, employees or employers, grandmothers, aunties, bloggers...
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Issues to be faced Who will we become A daily struggle between emotion and tasks Further decline Shame isolation and stigma Grief and loss Fear of loss of privacy Death
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Dementia represents the end of dreaming, a long and unforgiving one way odyssey into obscurity, clouded in a thick and unforgiving fog.
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The Adelaide Cosy Club
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Dementia care is caring for people who often do not know they need care, and don’t want to be in care; no wonder they may become angry and upset!
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Thank you
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References Barnett, AE, 2000, Including the person with dementia in designing and delivering care, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, UK. Brooker, D, 2007, Person-Centred Dementia Care: Making services better, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, UK. NOLAN M., DAVIES S., BROWN J., KEADY J. & NOLAN J., Beyond ‘person- centred’ care: a new vision for gerontological nursing, International Journal of Older People Nursing in association with Journal of Clinical Nursing 13, 3a, 45–53, 2004. O’Rourke, V, 2008, I Wish I Were a Leper, Lumino Press, Qld, Australia. O’Connor, D. & Purves, B., (Editors) 2009, Decision-making, Personhood and Dementia: Exploring the Interface, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, UK.
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