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This excellent, informative and well presented, a book provides the
reader with fourteen edited chapters covering an area of policy and
practice that is quite specific but will inform anyone interested
in the development of a service user participation ethos in adult
social care. It is a book that is relevant to managers and
practitioners, both as students and qualified professionals, as
well as academics. Care management is now well established in the
everyday practice of predominantly statutory organisations. This
book revisits the principles of this method of assessing and
planning the care needs of adult service users, and introduces
Person Centred Planning (PCP) as a suitable method for ensuring
that much of the empowerment rhetoric care management is actually
realised.' - British Journal of Social Work 'Part of the attraction
of this book is its strong practice component. This is applicable
to the different professionals working with people with learning
disabilities, in whatever their service configuration. For
students, the book will also provide a good introduction to the
impact of person centred planning and its connections to a long
history of similar initiatives.' - Journal of Interprofessional
Care 'This book is a stimulating and challenging read of those
working in service development generally, as well as learning
disability services. There is a potential broad care management
readership that might also find this relevant and interesting.' -
Journal of Interprofessional Care 'This is an important book. It
brings together chapters by many of the foremost researchers and
practitioners in person centred planning. The book contains many
ideas for taking the PCP process to a higher level of
sophistication to really underpin the future development of
appropriate and effective services.' - Community Living 'This book
will help social workers to reconnect with the core values of their
profession and to challenge institutionalised policies and
practices. It has proven to be a valuable teaching resource and
whilst its focus is on people with learning disabilities, the
principles of PCP that it raises are relevant to any service user
group and social work arena. Highly recommended.' - Professional
Social Work 'There are many important issues facing the care
management system today in the light of person-centred planning and
approaches, and you would be hard-pressed to find a better
collection of insightful and radical thinkers in this area than
those featured here. It asks hard questions, and challenges the
professional to adopt more inclusive and accessible work practices.
Wherever you work in the field of learning difficulties you should
read this book carefully and aim to put "person-centeredness" at
the core of your practice.' - Community Care 'You would be
hard-pressed to find a better collection of insightful and radical
thinkers in the area of care management. Wherever you work in the
field of learning difficulties you should read this book carefully
and seek to put "person centredness" at the core of your practice.
The challenge for professionals, is making it a reality for
individuals.' - Community Care This timely book provides a
reflective analysis of person centred planning for people with
learning disabilities, complementing policy initiatives that focus
on individualised planning and service user involvement. Drawing on
practical experience and research findings, the contributors
explore policy and practice issues, including: * advocacy and
empowerment * risk management and adult protection * inter-agency
and inter-professional working * ethnicity and culture *
de-institutionalisation. Vivid case studies illustrate best
practice in person centred planning, and the authors offer a rich
variety of ideas for increasing the participation, self-esteem and
quality of life of people with learning disabilities. This
practical and accessible text is an invaluable guide for policy
makers, carers and social work managers, academics and students.
This book is both a timely and challenging exploration of providing
personal care for people with learning disabilities, an area of
care provision that tends to be neglected in comparison with high
profile areas of care management today. Well researched and
presented, there is comprehensive coverage of all main aspects of
providing intimate and personal care, ranging from the wider
context (culturally sensitive provision, sexuality, health and
hygiene, and law) to more specific practice areas
(multi-disciplinary working, teaching independent living skills,
people with profound/multiple disabilities, children and young
people and older adults).' - Professional Social Work 'Intimate and
Personal Care with People with learning Disabilities edited by
Steven Carnaby and Paul Cambridge (Jessica Kingsley Publishers,
GBP19.99) is an academic book but it is fascinating and written to
inform and change practice. Giving intimate care is possibly the
most difficult and complex area of care work, yet it is rarely
analysed and understood in this sort of depth. We tend to write
rather pompous and detached policies about dignity and privacy and
they don't actually help staff to discuss and think through the
realities that they face when helping clients with the most
intimate situations. Care plans may generalise and skate over the
details, leaving residents and staff to do their best in situations
that are personally and professionally challenging. This is a book
for managers (of care homes of all kinds) who want to develop their
team's capacity to think and to understand, and thereby to provide
the very best care.' - Caring Times 'Probably the first substantial
discussion of and guide to this essential area of care practice. A
wideranging volume which deserves to be read and kept as a
reference volume by all professional teams providing intimate
care.' - Current Awareness Service This important guide is the
first to consider the management and practice of intimate and
personal care for people with learning disabilities. It examines in
detail aspects of care such as training, ethnicity, sexuality and
competence in practice, drawing on the extensive practical
experience of the contributors. They discuss important issues
including the nature of touch, how physical contact is intended and
experienced, carers' duty of care, and risk management. Against the
backdrop of a recent government strategy for people with learning
disabilities, the book will also explore management considerations
of best value, care standards, performance monitoring and
inspection. Providing academic, professional and learning outcomes
from research, this book will be an invaluable guide to managers,
policy makers, carers, academics and students in the field of
social care and learning disability.
Social workers and allied professionals will find this book to be a
valuable tool, highlighting ways of improving the cultural
sensitivity of disability services and parental and family support.
Combining a wide-ranging survey and in-depth interviews, the
authors build a rich picture of the lives of South Asian families
with a child with severe disabilities and place their experiences
in the wider context of how culture and ethnicity can impact on a
family's experience of disability. The authors offer clear ideas
for practical improvements in: * awareness and mobilisation of
formal support services * parental and extended family acceptance
of the child's disability * availability of support groups and
other informal support * parents' physical and mental health * the
child and family's social life linking their findings to recent
policy initiatives to improve the information and support offered
to all carers. Policy makers, academics and practitioners in
health, social work and education will find the authors give an
invaluable insight into the cultural, religious and language needs
of ethnic minority families coping with disability.
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