This text provides a foundation of essential knowledge and practical guidance for building best practice in the care of older people.
Fully updated for its second edition, Care of Older People uses a whole-person and values-led approach to explore practice with older people, providing the opportunity for practitioners to reflect critically on not just what they do but also on how and why. It includes two new chapters, the first looking at the ways in which digital technologies can impact on how care support is delivered and the potential for older peoples lives to be enriched or otherwise by them, and the second reflecting the particular challenges of helping older people at the end of their lives to manage their needs. Highlighting how older people in receipt of care support can be enabled to be co-producers of knowledge, it challenges the depiction of older people with support needs as one-dimensional individuals rather than multi-dimensional people with life left to live.
This accessible book is an invaluable learning resource for all those working, or studying, across the caring professions, including social work, social care, nursing, occupational therapy and anyone committed to excellence in eldercare.
Fully updated for its 2nd edition, Care of Older People uses a whole-person and values-led approach to explore practice with older people, providing the opportunity for practitioners to reflect critically on not just what they do but also on how and why.
Welcome, About the author, Foreword by Professor Jason Powell,
Introduction,
1. The older people you support are unique, not just one of
the elderly.
2. The older people you support are multi-dimensional adults,
3. The older people you support are still on a journey through life and not
at the end of it,
4. But some of the older people you support might be
nearing the end of their journey,
5. The older people you support are people
with problems, not problems themselves,
6. The older people you support are
capable of giving as well as receiving,
7. The older people you support are
likely to be profoundly affected by multiple and cumulative losses,
8. The
older people you support are entitled to take risks that you and others may
not think are in their best interests,
9. The older people you support are
partners in their care arrangements,
10. The older people you support are
possibly facing many different challenges,
11. The older people you support
are living in the same digital age as you are,
12. The older people you
support are able to draw on a range of strengths and resilience factors,
Conclusion, Guide to further learning, References. Also by Sue Thompson
Dr Sue Thompson has many years experience as a nurse, social worker, care manager, practice teacher, distance learning tutor, researcher and writer of working in the field of eldercare. Throughout her career, her passion has been to promote eldercare practice which is driven by a desire on the part of those who support dependent older people to help them to live, as far as is possible, the life they want to be living. This passion inspired her PhD study on reciprocity in old age, where she explored whether a sense of usefulness remains important to older peoples self-esteem and spiritual well-being when they become significantly dependent on others, and whether this is recognised by those undertaking assessments of their care needs.