Person-centred Dementia Care: Making Services Better

Front Cover
Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2007 - Social Science - 160 pages

The term person centred care has been widely used, misused and ill defined. It is used frequently in the aims and objectives for dementia care services and provision, although in practice what lies behind the rhetoric can be questionable. This book gives fresh definition to the important ideas behind and the implementation of person centred care for people with dementia.

Dawn Brooker explains the four key elements of person centred care that comprise the VIPS model: Valuing people with dementia and those who care for them (V); treating people as Individuals (I); looking at the world from the Perspective of the person with dementia (P); and a positive Social environment in which the person living with dementia can experience relative well being (S). With an emphasis on practical application, Person Centred Dementia Care provides care organisations with clear, accessible guidelines on how to put the VIPS model into operation for effective care that is `fit for VIPs'. Part 2 of the book comprises the VIPS organisational reflection tool, which care providers can use to assess how well they think they are doing at providing person-centred care.

This will be essential reading for practitioners working with and policy makers responsible for people with dementia at all levels.

 

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
7
Part 1 Unpacking What We Mean by PersonCentered Care
9
Part 2 The VIPS Framework
117
REFERENCES
151
SUBJECT INDEX
156
AUTHOR INDEX
159
Back cover
161
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Professor Dawn Brooker is the Director of the University of Worcester Association for Dementia Studies. Professionally qualified as a clinical psychologist, she has over twenty-five years' experience working to improve the quality of care for people with dementia as a clinician, as a service manager and as an academic.

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