Independence and Well-being Flashcards
Support independence and well-being
Reportable suspicion:
a reasonable suspicion that a child has, is, or will suffer from abuse/neglect and does not have an able and willing parent to protect them
What respect can mean (practically):
Being aware of differences;
Valuing and honouring differences;
Avoiding judgments of other cultural values, beliefs, practices;
Accepting differences.
A client’s individual differences may be interrelated and impact on the support that is provided.
An example:
Ravi felt very uncomfortable about having to ask for support for his mother. Traditionally her family would have provided all the care and assistance she needed. However, as a single father with young children he recognised that without ‘outside’ help his mother could not retain her independence. He contacted the local service, explained the situation and arranged for a meeting between Karen, a community service worker, his mother and himself.
His mother, Jahnavi, was reluctant to have strangers assisting her with home and personal care. Initially she refused to be part of the conversations about the support she required. While able to speak fluent English, she spoke only Hindi when Karen was undertaking an assessment. Ravi translated.
Karen recognised that the support offered to Jahnavi would need to respect that she valued her independence and had culturally based expectations about who should provide support. She also realised that any service provision may need to be provided in Hindi.
Health and well-being:
can be referring to any or, all, of the following: Physical Psychological Social Spiritual Cultural Financial Career/Occupation
5 Basic human needs:
Physical Psychological Spiritual Cultural Sexual
5 Basic requirements for good health:
Mental health Nutrition and hydration Exercise Hygiene Lifestyle
Maslow and the concept of self-actualisation:
Physiological needs:
breathing, food, water, shelter, clothing, sleep.
Safety and security:
health, employment, property, family and social stability.
Love and belonging:
friendship, family, intimacy, sense of connection.
Self-esteem:
confidence, achievement, respect of others, the need to be a unique individual.
Self-actualisation:
morality, creativity, spontaneity, acceptance, experience purpose, meaning and inner potential.
Abraham Maslow’s theory “the Hierarchy of Needs” discusses how humans have a definite set of needs.
Lower order needs must be met or satisfied before it is possible to move to higher order needs. The highest order need is self-actualisation.
The order of needs is not rigid but instead may be flexible based on external circumstances or individual differences.
Most behavior is multi-motivated, that is, simultaneously determined by more than one basic need.
Self-actualised people are characterised by:
1) being problem-focused;
2) incorporating an ongoing freshness of appreciation of life;
3) a concern about personal growth; and
4) the ability to have peak experiences
Behaviours leading to self-actualisation:
(a) Experiencing life like a child, with full absorption and concentration;
(b) Trying new things instead of sticking to safe paths;
(c) Listening to your own feelings in evaluating experiences instead of the voice of tradition, authority or the majority;
(d) Avoiding pretense (‘game playing’) and being honest;
(e) Being prepared to be unpopular if your views do not coincide with those of the majority;
(f) Taking responsibility and working hard;
(g) Trying to identify your defenses and having the courage to give them up.
The characteristics of self-actualisers and the behaviours leading to self-actualisation are shown in the list above. Although people achieve self-actualisation in their own unique way, they tend to share certain characteristics. However, self-actualisation is a matter of degree, ‘There are no perfect human beings’ (Maslow,1970a, p. 176).
Maslow did not equate self-actualisation with perfection. Self-actualisation merely involves achieving one’s potential. Thus, someone can be silly, wasteful, vain and impolite, and still self-actualise. Less than two percent of the population achieve self-actualisation.
Some (9) characteristics of people who have self-actualised:
Tolerate uncertainty;
Accept themselves and others for what they are;
Spontaneous in thought and action;
Problem-centered (not self-centered);
Unusual sense of humour;
Capable of deep appreciation of basic life-experience;
Establish deep satisfying interpersonal relationships with a few people;
Need privacy;
Strong moral/ethical standards
Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development (8):
Trust vs Mistrust:
Birth to 1 year −Infants gain trust from a warm, responsive environment, in contrast to mistrust if they are mistreated or ignored
Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt:
1-3 years − Autonomy is nurtured when children can use their skills to make their own decisions
Initiative vs Guilt:
3-6 years − Children experiment with who they can become through imaginative play.
Industry vs Inferiority:
6-11 years − As they become more involved in school, children develop the ability to work with others.
Identity vs Role diffusion:
Adolescence − Developing an identity is a key issue during this stage of development, but can result in a negative outcome if there is confusion about future adult roles. Establishing intimate ties with others is a major task at this stage
Intimacy vs Isolation:
Early adulthood -
Generativity vs Stagnation:
Middle adulthood − Giving to the next generation is the essence of this stage, and individuals who fail to do this feel stagnated without this meaningful sense of accomplishment.
Ego-integrity vs despair:
Old age − During this time of self-reflection, people who have lived satisfying lives develop a feeling of integrity, while those who perceive they have not lived a satisfying life experience dissatisfaction and fear death.
Different ways to express personal identity:
Personality: The attributes (behavioral, temperamental, emotional and mental) that characterise a unique individual e.g. your reactions to events
Gender identity:
Your identity as male or female.
Identification:
How you, consciously or unconsciously, identify with the characteristics of another person or group.
Personhood:
Being a person, awareness of self.
The key elements of best practice can be summarised as:
1) Being RESPONSIVE to the unique needs of each person you work with. Always think about how to provide just the right amount of support.
2) Seeing every person as an INDIVIDUAL
3) Supporting and respecting the CHOICES of the people you work with. Always think about how the preferences of the people you work with might differ from your own.
4) Actively LISTENING – really paying attention to what a person is communicating to you through their words or actions. Give people the best help possible to get their message across to you and others.
5) Being FLEXIBLE, while recognising the value of routine - not allowing routines to dominate the lives of the people you work with.
6) Using POSITIVE language – always framing communication in a positive rather than negative way. Adjusting your communication to enable the people you support to succeed in everything they do.
7) ACKNOWLEDGING and responding to difference positively
8) Paying attention to the HERE and NOW – seeing that in every moment the quality of your work affects the lives of people you work with.
9) Being sensitive to the ENVIRONMENT – being aware of and responsive to the effect of the immediate and wider social and physical context on people’s lives.
You can best support clients in activities when you understand and respond appropriately to their:
Needs
Stage of life
Development
Strengths.
Client routines:
For many people, having a routine provides a sense of security and assists them to remain healthy and maintain their wellbeing.
Discuss client’s routines and the impact a service or program may have on their routine.
If clients express concerns about these impacts investigate ways to enable a continuation of the routine.
Some people may have routines that are based on medications e.g. some medications cause drowsiness. Clients with children may have routines around delivering and collecting children from child care or schools.