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Person Centred Care - PowerPoint Presentation

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Person Centred Care - PPT Presentation

Nursing Values SWAP Lecture 2016 Abertay University 2016 1 Aims for this session What are nursing values Understand what is meant by the term person centred care Understand what is meant by delivering person centred care ID: 530670

abertay 2016 mhn006 university 2016 abertay university mhn006 nursing care values person practice health ref 2015 centred mental dignity essentials delves london

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Slide1

Person Centred Care

Nursing Values

SWAP – Lecture 2016

Abertay University 2016

1Slide2

Aims for this session:

What are nursing values?Understand what is meant by the term ‘person centred care’Understand what is meant by delivering person centred careAbertay University 2016 2Slide3

Abertay University 2016

3Take a moment to think about what is meant by value-based, person-centred care and why is this important in nursing?Slide4

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

4 If we consider the nurses code (NMC, 2015) and the guidance on professional conduct for nursing and midwifery students, the values of the nurses role become clearer.

So whilst the NMC code clearly defines nursing values it remains each nurses responsibility to deliver care in a way that reflects these values

A patient is not just someone who needs for example, a bath; they have life histories and experiences that have made them unique individuals and we need to consider the person in this context

Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. Sage

The Nursing code is our compass to high standards of careSlide5

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

5Slide6

Activity 1

Reflect on your own values It is important to recognise and respect differences between us while owning our own personal hopes, concerns and values. please take a few minutes to identify some of your own personal or family values ….Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

6Slide7

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

7Person centred Care

Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. SageSlide8

Keeping the person at the centre.

Seeing beyond the illness or disability to the person may be a way of helping to keep focussed on the business of providing high quality compassionate care. what do you see?

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

8Slide9

Persons living with dementia

are usually capable ofmore than we can

imagine Slide10

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

10Compassion?

What do we mean by Slide11

Compassion

Compassion has been a value central to nursing since the profession was establishedAbertay University 2016 11Slide12

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

12Sadly you may have noticed in the media it seems to be the one thing that the profession has been charged with losing, diluting and undervaluing as other priorities take its place. Slide13

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

13The Francis Report (2013) and a number of other reports consider occasions when patients were not treated with the compassion they deserved, along with a number of other serious failings. Slide14

Compassion continued….

Compassion is directly derived from the ethical principle of beneficence.It is the ethical principle which requires that we seek to do or produce good for others. Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. SageAbertay University 2016/16 MHN006

14Slide15
Slide16

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

16Although nursing is diverse and multi-faceted, all nursing practice shares the same ultimate aim to improve the lives of those receiving health careSo for example a nursing activity such as feeding a patient does not just mean that the direct effect of the task is the patient being fed; it also depends upon how the food is given!Slide17

Caring

Caring is frequently described as being at the heart of nursing, but what exactly that means appears to differ between nurses.And also between patient and carer groupsAbertay University 2016/16 MHN00617Slide18

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

18Take a moment to reflect: Turn to the person next to you and see if you can identify what we mean by caring behaviours.For example: Giving reassurance to a friend who is going through difficult times. Slide19

Dignity

Is also enshrined not only within nursing guidance but also other health professionals guidance and legislation (NMC, 2015), Human Rights Act (1998), The general medical council guidance (GMC, 2006) Yet what do we understand by the term Dignity?Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00619Slide20

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

20Take a moment to reflect on the concept of dignity and see if you can define what it means to youSlide21

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

21Un-dignified Carehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIgXN_ckDZgSlide22

Dignity Continued…

Is dignity clearly understood?How would you promote dignity?Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00622Slide23

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

23‬Dignity – Little Things Make A Differencehttps://youtu.be/ueLqAJRxKpQSlide24

SPIRITUALITY

What does this mean to you?What does this mean for our patients?Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00624Slide25

General attributes nurses must attain

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00625Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. SageSlide26

Attributes felt by patients to be important

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00626Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. SageSlide27

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

27Values and mental healthNursing10 essential shared capabilities (2012)Slide28

The 10 Essential Shared Capabilities or 10 ESC’s

Working in partnershipsRespecting diversityPractising ethicallyChallenging inequalityPromoting recoveryIdentifying peoples needs and strengthsProviding service user-centred careMaking a difference

Promoting safety and positive risk takingPersonal development and learning

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

28Slide29

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

29How does the use of language and labels empower or disempower people?Slide30

The 10 ESCs continued….

The 10 ESCs detail core capabilities for all mental health workers, taking account of rights and values-based practice, recovery-focused practice and person-centred care. They are the foundation on which good mental health practice is based and mirror and complement the principles underpinning the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2004.Ref: www.nes.scot.nhs.ukAbertay University 2016/16 MHN00630Slide31

The 10 ESCs continued.

Are about a set of attitudes, behaviours, expectations and relationshipsDescribe the values and principles that should be demonstrated in the way mental health services are commissioned, planned and deliveredAre derived from, and reflect, how people who use mental health services and those who support them want to be treated, and the way they expect to be treatedOutline values and principles that should influence the actions and outcomes that people working in mental services should be seeking to achieve.Ref: www.nes.scot.nhs.netAbertay University 2016/16 MHN006

31Slide32

Person Centered Care - recap

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN00632Ref: Delves-Yates, C., 2015 Essentials of Nursing practice: London. SageSlide33

Abertay University 2016/16 MHN006

33https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XOCda6OiYpg‘Nursing The Nation’ by Molly Case