(DOWNLOAD) "Self-Neglect: Learning from Life" by Shona Britten & Karen Whitby # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Self-Neglect: Learning from Life
- Author : Shona Britten & Karen Whitby
- Release Date : January 15, 2021
- Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,Professional & Technical,Medical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 4978 KB
Description
A practice-based perspective on working with people who self-neglect. This book explores the issues and situations which can arise and helps practitioners to adopt a strengths-based “Learning from Life” approach in the translation of MSP principles to practical implementation.
Self-neglect: Learning from Life helps frontline practitioners ensure that Making Safeguarding Personal (MSP) is an everyday reality. Using two case scenarios, the authors examine issues and practice-based situations which arise in the daily application of MSP to casework with adults. The scenarios demonstrate lifespan and experience issues in the adoption of MSP as person-centred and person-led practice with people who self-neglect. The statutory principles of Empowerment, Prevention, Proportionality, Protection, Partnership, and Accountability are also translated into practical language and their meaning and implications are unpacked.
This journey from principles to practical implementation uses a suite of clear and concise practice focused resources which adopt a person-centred, relationship-based approach to all conversations, interventions and aspects of practice. The resources include:
a range from SnapShots on…- a selection of relevant topic areas in work with adults at risk through their safeguarding journey
practice-based tools for practitioners to use in the quality monitoring of their own casework
Taking it Further” referencing and suggested sources of more information.
This invaluable book fills a gap that currently exists in the practical application of the statutory MSP principles as part of a “life-span approach” to work with people who self-neglect. It minimises the risks associated with “siloed” approaches to ensure the person is held at the centre of all interventions.