Residential care / Long-Term Care Facilities Books
Health Professions Press,U.S. Understanding and Preventing Harmful Interactions
Book SynopsisFor the first time, those at the front lines of care have access to a single source for a comprehensive set of practical tools to effectively address distressing and harmful interactions between residents with dementia. This prevalent but under-recognized public health problem in long-term care homes results in serious consequences, including psychological harm, physical injuries, and even death. After examining the potential consequences and manifestations of these behavioral expressions, readers learn how to identify the contributing factors, causes, unmet needs, and triggering events that commonly lead to these episodes. With an emphasis on person-directed care practices, this book describes numerous psychosocial strategies to use for prevention and de-escalation prior to, during, and after episodes of harmful resident-to-resident incidents.This valuable resource will help inform training programs for direct care staff, interdisciplinary teams, and LTC administrators. In addition to cost savings from reduced resident-to-resident incidents, care providers will see significant improvements in resident and staff well-being.Table of Contents About the Author Foreword Preface AcknowledgmentsIntroduction SECTION I. SPECTRUM OF DHRRIS AND HOW TO APPROACH THEM Spectrum and Consequences Principles for Approaching DHRRIs SECTION II. CONTRIBUTING FACTORS, CAUSES, AND TRIGGERS Resident’s History and Background Factors Situational Causes and Triggers Factors in the Physical Environment Factors Related to Care Partners SECTION III. PREVENTION AND DE-ESCALATION STRATEGIES Procedures and Strategies at the Organizational Level Proactive Measures Immediate Strategies During Episodes Post-Episode Strategies APPENDIX A. Assessment Tools and Processes for Prevention of DHRRIs Index
£38.21
Taylor & Francis Psychologically Informed Environment Principles
Book SynopsisAs pressure grows on care managers and staff to work with ever more complex needs, this book is a timely account of how introducing the Psychologically Informed Environment (PIE) principles into a care home will improve work practice and outcomes for residents. The PIE approach enables staff to: Have improved understanding of residents' needs Better understand how to respond effectively to complex behaviour Introduce trauma-informed practice into their work Improve staff support and morale Improve outcomes for even the most hard to reach clients Reflecting on one care homeâs journey to becoming a PIE this book shows how low-cost, high-impact interventions delivered on the frontline can have far reaching effects on the wellbeing of residents, staff and wider culture of the care environment. It will be of interest to all professional, academics, policy-makers and students working in the fields of adult social services and health and social care more broadly.Table of ContentsIntroduction. 1 Highwater House. 2 What is a Psychologically Informed Environment (PIE)? 3 Trauma-Informed Care. 4 Relationships. 5 Reflective Practice. 6 Elastic Tolerance. 7 Psychological Awareness. 8 Environment. 9 Evidence. 10 Rules, Roles, and Responsiveness (The 3 Rs). 11 Staff Support and Training. Conclusion. Index.
£47.49
Johns Hopkins University Press Living with Cancer
Book SynopsisPatients at every stage will find Living with Cancer a comprehensive, thoughtful, and accessible guide for navigating the illness and its treatment.Trade ReviewAn unusually comforting and genuinely useful resource. Booklist For anyone who has been diagnosed with cancer, or for those who have friends of family facing this illness, this guide will be an extremely invaluable resource. Patients at any stage of the disease will find rich, useful information that can help them cope more effectively with their illness. Foreword ReviewsTable of ContentsChapter 1: How am I Going to Get Through This? Part I: Making Sense of Your DiagnosisChapter 2: Setting the Goals of TreatmentChapter 3: Understanding the Biology of CancerChapter 4: What Is a Liquid Tumor?Chapter 5: How to Prepare for TreatmentChapter 6: Tests and Scans in TreatmentChapter 7: How Am I Supposed to Cope with This?Chapter 8: How Do I Cope with Changes in My Body? Part II: Managing Symptoms and Side EffectsChapter 9: Controlling NauseaChapter 10: Managing Constipation, Diarrhea, and Bowel ObstructionChapter 11: Minimizing PainChapter 12: Should I Worry about Shortness of Breath?Chapter 13: What If I'm Losing Weight?Chapter 14: What if I Have a Sudden Fever?Chapter 15: Bleeding and Clotting IssuesChapter 16: Why am I So Exhausted?Chapter 17: Why Do People Keep Asking if I Am Depressed or Anxious?Chapter 18: How Does Cancer Affect My Brain? Part III: Dealing with Progressing CancerChapter 19: They Tell Me the Cancer Is ProgressingChapter 20: Living and Hoping with Advancing CancerChapter 21: What About Practical Concerns?Chapter 22: My Doctor Says that Chemotherapy Is No Longer EffectiveChapter 23: My Body Feels Like It's Shutting DownChapter 24: What Is a Good Death? Index7
£40.38
Johns Hopkins University Press Living with Cancer
Book SynopsisPatients at every stage will find Living with Cancer a comprehensive, thoughtful, and accessible guide for navigating the illness and its treatment.Trade ReviewAn unusually comforting and genuinely useful resource. Booklist For anyone who has been diagnosed with cancer, or for those who have friends of family facing this illness, this guide will be an extremely invaluable resource. Patients at any stage of the disease will find rich, useful information that can help them cope more effectively with their illness. Foreword ReviewsTable of ContentsChapter 1: How am I Going to Get Through This? Part I: Making Sense of Your DiagnosisChapter 2: Setting the Goals of TreatmentChapter 3: Understanding the Biology of CancerChapter 4: What Is a Liquid Tumor?Chapter 5: How to Prepare for TreatmentChapter 6: Tests and Scans in TreatmentChapter 7: How Am I Supposed to Cope with This?Chapter 8: How Do I Cope with Changes in My Body? Part II: Managing Symptoms and Side EffectsChapter 9: Controlling NauseaChapter 10: Managing Constipation, Diarrhea, and Bowel ObstructionChapter 11: Minimizing PainChapter 12: Should I Worry about Shortness of Breath?Chapter 13: What If I'm Losing Weight?Chapter 14: What if I Have a Sudden Fever?Chapter 15: Bleeding and Clotting IssuesChapter 16: Why am I So Exhausted?Chapter 17: Why Do People Keep Asking if I Am Depressed or Anxious?Chapter 18: How Does Cancer Affect My Brain? Part III: Dealing with Progressing CancerChapter 19: They Tell Me the Cancer Is ProgressingChapter 20: Living and Hoping with Advancing CancerChapter 21: What About Practical Concerns?Chapter 22: My Doctor Says that Chemotherapy Is No Longer EffectiveChapter 23: My Body Feels Like It's Shutting DownChapter 24: What Is a Good Death? Index7
£17.10
SteinerBooks, Inc Anthroposophic Nursing Practice: Foundations and
Book SynopsisAnthroposophic nursing care connects the treatment of the body with the care of the patient's soul and spirit. Attention is paid to touch, using warmth, cold air and light to promote healing. While physical wellbeing is central to our modern society, our bodies actually receive little respect and attention, especially when we become ill and old. This book argues that nursing values need to be rediscovered which respect the individual, embrace illness as part of life, and allow time for healing. Anthroposophic Nursing Practice highlights a form of nursing which is both holistic and optimistic. This important book gathers together knowledge and perspectives from generations of nurses, including Anna Wilde, Bernhard Deckers and Heikie Schaumann.This comprehensive work will inevitably become the classic text on the important practice of anthroposophic nursing.Table of ContentsChapter 1: How Do You Learn Anthroposophic Nursing?Chapter 2: Observation as a Method of Self-development and a Therapeutic Element in Care and DestinyChapter 3: The Anthropological Foundations of Nursing Extended by AnthroposophyChapter 4: Illness and DestinyChapter 5: Nursing as a Path of DevelopmentChapter 6: Meditation in NursingChapter 7: The Concept of Nursing Gestures as a Model for Nursing CareChapter 8: RhythmChapter 9: The Human Warmth Organism and Its CareChapter 10: Variations on Whole-Body WashingChapter 11: Preventing Bedsores, Pneumonia, and Thrombosis in Seriously Ill PatientsChapter 12: Rhythmical Einreibung According to Wegman/HauschkaChapter 13: Compresses in Anthroposophically Extended Nursing CareChapter 14: Active Principles in External ApplicationsChapter 15: Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Puerperium as Stages of Human BecomingChapter 16: Neonatal Nursing Care. Care Is EducationEducation Is CareChapter 17: The Concept of Development as the Basis for Anthroposophically Extended Pediatric NursingChapter 18: Psychiatric NursingChapter 19: From the Question of Meaning in Cancer to the Cultivation of the SensesChapter 20: Anthroposophic Oncology NursingChapter 21: Geriatric Care as Care for Human BeingsChapter 22: Aspects of Caring for Elderly People who are Mentally Ill or ConfusedChapter 23: Caring for People with Dementia in Inpatient FacilitiesChapter 24: Palliative CareChapter 25: The Care and Accompaniment of the Dying and the Deceased
£42.50
Health Professions Press,U.S. Living Normally with Dementia: One Care Home's
Book SynopsisLiving Normally with Dementia tells the successful story of Dagmarsminde, a small innovative nursing home in Denmark with a remarkable and life-affirming approach to dementia care.The philosophy and lived experiences of this model home are illustrated with real examples and vignettes from day-to-day care. The founder and staff offer a replicable approach to helping their residents with dementia enjoy a richer, more normal-feeling life than residents receiving the “usual care” in most settings. The staff, in turn, enjoy the professional rewards of following their calling to this work with confidence and compassion.Person-centered practices define the daily routine and include a focus on good nutrition, contact with nature, healthy physical activities, and as much independence in activities of daily living as possible. The needs and progress of each resident are paramount.From the time a new resident arrives at the home until the person has died, the goal of care is to help residentsThrive in a home where they are heard and respected at all timesHave a medication-free existence as much as possibleRemain independently mobile by walking without assistive devices unless absolutely necessaryEnjoy family-style dining with staff and residents togetherExperience ordinary sights and sounds of nature—from household pets to small farm animals, garden flowers, and nearby woodsThis book invites leaders, direct care partners, students, and families to immerse themselves in a home that operates very differently from traditional, institutional nursing homes. The goal is to help readers around the world envision new, more satisfying ways of working with people living with dementia and to explore new approaches in their own care homes.Table of Contents Preface Introduction to Dagmarsminde About the Author Acknowledgments DedicationPart I. The Rehabilitating and Stabilizing Phase The Move: Crossing the Threshold to a New Life Aesthetics: Balancing the Mind with DÉcor The Craft of Nursing: Good Judgment and Hands-on Care The Call to Service: The Selfless Workplace Tapering Off Medication: Purification and Stability Exercise: Active Residents Seize the Day Assistive Devices for Mobility Working with Energies: A Dynamic Balance The Circadian Rhythm: Open-eyed Residents The Routine: Together from Morning till Night Sanatorium Practices The Great Outdoors: Sensing at the Highest Level Nourishing Body and Mind Continuing Family Traditions Under Observation: Looking After the Health of Our Residents Part II. The Weakening Phase Swallowing Problems: When Eating Solid Foods is Difficult Approaching the End of Life Part III. The Final Phase Working with the Family The Dying Process The Wake
£36.51