Week one Flashcards
Define chronic care model?
Focuses on the delivery of care with an expectation on the individual to engage with prescribed tasks
Define recovery model?
Uses the guiding principle of hope and focuses on the ability to have a meaningful life despite the limitations caused by their chronic condition
Define harm reduction model?
The focus is on the reduction of the harmful outcomes of a behaviour, rather than the behaviour itself
Define palliative care model?
Focuses on working with the individual’s current capacity to focus on the direction of their choosing
Components of chronic care model?
- Patients have the innate personal agency or capacity to carry out those activities that are deemed ‘necessary’.
- Contains the community and wider health care delivery system that those with chronic conditions engage with.
Components of recovery model?
- Uses the goals created by the person based on what they value.
- Re-engaging with valued and meaningful activities or valued roles in order to make the ‘most of life’ and to regain aspects of their ‘ordinary life’.
Components of harm reduction model?
- Focuses on empowerment, compassion, collaboration, respect and acceptance.
- Through care and consideration health care professionals and people living with long-term conditions can work to reduce the level of harm caused by the illness, determinants of health and behaviours.
Components of palliative care model?
- Different than end-of-life care.
- Seeks to address the physical, intellectual, emotional, social and spiritual needs to facilitate the persons autonomy, access to information and choice throughout the continuum of the disease.
Components of patient centred care?
- Clients participating in their care as a respected and autonomous individual.
- Having and maintaining a genuine clinician-client relationship; open communication of knowledge, personal expertise, and clinical expertise between the client and the professional, and having a cohesive and co- operative team of professionals.
- The availability of resources needed for the client and the clinician to engage in person-centred care (for example time).