Dear Readers,
You may be interested in reading my new blog about travel and holidays http://bestvisitingspot.blogspot.com.
There are more tips coming about travel and vacations. Please share this to your family and friends if you find it quite useful.
Kind Regards
Foisal Talukdar
This blog is designed to help and support all Support Workers or Auxiliary Nurses who are currently working or willing to work in supported housing, NHS, or in the community. It is the place where you can share your knowledges, opinions, interests and dilemmas. You can also discuss any query about your career or any dilemmas or problems related to your career life or any question about your NVQ or QCF qualifications.
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Friday, 23 May 2014
Tuesday, 13 May 2014
Identify five different skills or approaches that might help resolve conflict
Conflict
arises among colleagues and others in care sector mostly from different views, method
of workings and personal experiences. Obviously there are plenty of other
reasons like inequality, domination, discrimination and personal interests
(such as conflict for position) can raise conflicts as well. However, conflict
and argument should neither occur in front of service user nor should reflect
on service standard.
- Good attitude and good relationships (Good partnership working): As far as possible, make sure that you treat others calmly and try to build mutual respect. Do your best to be courteous to one-another and remain constructive even under pressure.
- Paying undivided attention to the interests that are being presented: By listening carefully you'll most-likely understand why the person is adopting his or her position.
- Listen first; talk second: To solve a problem effectively you have to understand what person’s view is and where it is coming from before defending your own position.
- Keep people and problems separate: Remember you are in conflict to an issue not to a person. By separating the problem from the person, real issues can be debated without damaging working relationships.
- Compromising Attitude: Compromising helps to find a solution that will at least partially satisfy everyone. Everyone is expected to give up something and the compromiser him- or she also expects to relinquish something.
Moral Note: Remember, the
people you are serving are someone’s parents, grandparents and above all our
people. Reflect and imagine yourself in the same situation after 30-50 years
and should you expect the same you are doing now. Because, it is said that what
goes around comes around. And I have found a true relativity to the Newton’s
third rule is ‘Every action has equal or opposite reaction.’ Do not do anything
that you would not expect when you will be like them.
Monday, 7 April 2014
Identify one report on serious failure to protect individual from abuse. Describe the unsafe practice in review.
Mr. X is physically frail and immobile who lives in a care
home. Due to lack of his mobility and other age related issues, Mr. X supposed
to assist by two professional carers for personal care and mobility using
equipment. One of the carer found nobody in his unit to assist him in one of
the afternoon and tried himself to assist Mr. X to the lavatory as Mr. X told
him it is an emergency and he needed to access the lavatory without delay.
While carer was helping Mr. X on his own to the lavatory, Mr. X fell of the
sling and broke his hip. In daily care records it is found that carer very
often assist him on his own.
Review: Although care
plan clearly stated that two carers should assist Mr. X according to risk
assessment but carer has been failure to follow rules and procedure. Physical
abuse has occurred in this incident. Also this physical abuse can lead Mr. X to
psychological abuse through trauma (afraid of being moved). As an employee, he
should not only to comply with rules and procedure and follow the care plan but
also has responsibility to inform employer if he notices any hazardous handling
activities in the workplace. Also he should inform manager if he needs
resources which he has been failure to do. Unsafe practices identified in this
incidence has listed below –
Ø
Mr. X is assisted and manhandled by one carer
Ø
Not following rules and procedures by employee
Ø
Supervision has not been carried out properly as
carer has assisted Mr. X previously on his own
Ø
Adequate resources and information has not been
provided by the company or carer was not following any
Ø Adequate human resource has not been provided by
the employer
Ø
Employer has also been failure to maintain safe
working environment.
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Monday, 16 December 2013
Reflective Practice Pros and Cons
Reflective
practice is about the process of thinking about your practice and taking
personal responsibility for improving your professional skills. Reflection enables
you to review the positive aspects of your own practice in order to build on
your successes and to identify areas for improvement or further development.
What is Reflective practice : Reflective practice is the analysis of
everyday working practices to improve practices and promote professional
development. It involves critically analysing yours actions with the goal of
improving yours professional practices.
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Working in a
professional manner needs a continuous process of reflection, which involves
looking at your practices, ideas and actions, then evaluating their
effectiveness in order to make improvements. Reflection stages are as follows –
Stage 1: Description of the event
Describe in detail the event you
are reflecting on. Include where you were;who else was there; why were you
there; what were you doing; what were other people doing; what the context of
the event was; what happened; what your part in this was; what parts did the
other people play; what was the result.
Stage 2: Feelings and Thoughts (Self
awareness)
At this
stage, try to recall and explore those things that were going on inside your
head. Include:
- How you were feeling when the event started?
- What you were thinking about at the time?
- How did it make you feel?
- How did other people make you feel?
- How did you feel about the outcome of the event?
- What do you think about it now?
Stage 3: Evaluation
Try to evaluate or make a
judgement about what has happened. Consider what was good about the experience
and what was bad about the experience or what did or did not go so well.
Stage 4: Analysis
Break the event down into its
component parts so they can be explored separately. You may need to ask more
detailed questions about the answers to the last stage. Include:
- What went well?
- What did you do well?
- What did others do well?
- What went wrong or did not turn out how it should have done?
- In what way did you or others contribute to this?
Stage 5: Conclusion
This differs from the evaluation
stage in that now you have explored the issue from different angles and have a
lot of information to base your judgement. It is here that you are likely to
develop insight into you own and other people’s behaviour in terms of how they
contributed to the outcome of the event. Remember the purpose of reflection is
to learn from an experience. Without detailed analysis and honest exploration
that occurs during all the previous stages, it is unlikely that all aspects of
the event will be taken into account and therefore valuable opportunities for
learning can be missed. During this stage you should ask yourself what you
could have done differently.
Stage 6: Action Plan
During this stage you should
think yourself forward into encountering the event again and to plan what you
would do – would you act differently or would you be likely to do the same?
Why is reflective practice so important?
Reflecting on your practice can enhance
and improve your confidence and self esteem because you can look at what you
are doing well, the things you have learnt and achieved and feel good about
yourself especially if you have done something with ease that you used to find
difficult or if you have done something good you never thought you would do.
This then gives you confidence to continue working well and to aim to try other
new things or to use what new skills or knowledge you have gained in your
practice. As a social care worker you are
responsible for providing care to the best of your ability to service user and
their families. You need to focus on your knowledge, skills and behaviour to
ensure that you are able to meet the demands made on you by this commitment.
Reflective practice is part of
the requirement for social care worker constantly to update professional
skills. Keeping a portfolio or plan or action offers considerable opportunity
for reflection on ongoing development. Supervision and reviews enable you to
identify strengths and areas of opportunity for future development.
You should consider the ways in which you interact
and communicate with your colleagues, service user and other professionals. The
profession depends on a culture of mutual support. You should aim to become
self-aware, self-directing and in touch with any environment.
Quality and
effective service delivery is about providing a service in the best possible
way. It is about anticipating, conforming to and sometimes exceeding the
clients’ expectations and requirements
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Maintaining the effectiveness of service
In
maintaining the effectiveness of the service, either at a service provider or
individual worker level, it is essential to be clear on what the quality
standards are and how they should be put into practice, and to monitor and
regularly review how the service is performing in relation to those standards.
When you will reflect on your practice
and evaluate them, you may bring some significant change in your practice to
improve quality of individual’s life and service provision.
Some services
arrange a process called a ‘self-assessment’, where each year they compare
staff and client views on how they meet the standards. This information is
combined and together, staff and clients decide on some actions for improving
the service for the following year.
You will have
to follow the codes of conduct and practice what is set out by government and
your organisation In order to provide effective quality service.
As a social care worker
you will have criteria to guide your practice and be clear about what standards
of conduct you are expected to meet. You are encouraged to use the codes to
examine your own practice and to look for areas in which you can improve.
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To work accordance with
codes of practice and conduct a social care worker must :
·
Protect the rights and
promote the interests of service users and carers
·
Strive to establish and
maintain the trust and confidence of service users and carers
·
Promote the independence of
service users while protecting them as far as possible from danger or harm
·
Respect the rights of
service users while seeking to ensure that your behaviour does not harm them or
other people
·
Uphold public trust and
confidence in social care services
· Be accountable for the
quality of their work and take responsibility for maintaining and improving
their knowledge and skills.
Remember, you will have to comply with general
codes of practice and conduct in your reflective practice or including your
reflective practice in order to provide better quality services.
Checklist to evaluate practice :
- How did you approach your work?
- Was your approach positive?
- How did the way you worked affect the service users?
- How did the way you worked affect your colleague?
- Which was the best aspect of the work you did?
- Which was the worst aspect of the work you did?
- Are there any areas in which you could improve?
- What are they and how you will you tackle them?
---------------------------------- Foisal Talukdar
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