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Supporting personal relationships: supporting people who need care and support to have meaningful relationships
- Authors:
- CHOICE SUPPORT, et al
- Publisher:
- Skills for Care
- Publication year:
- 2020
- Pagination:
- 46
- Place of publication:
- Leeds
This guidance is relevant to all people who provide social care to any group of people and it will help organisations to equip their staff to support people to develop and maintain personal relationships, in a way that respects peoples’ choices and values whilst keeping them safe. Organisations need to facilitate the environments, skills and opportunities which enable relationships to flourish and sexual needs should be recognised and addressed in the same way as other needs, which will assist in reducing the risk of sexual harm and abuse. Sections of the guide cover the values and behaviours that social care workers need and what they need to know and understand to support people with their personal relationships in a person-centred way. It also explains what employers can do to support the development of their workforce and how to develop a workforce development programme to provide staff with the skills to support personal relationships. The document includes a series of exercises to help organisations start to tackle the subject, explore their values and consider some common relationship scenarios and how organisations might approach them. (Edited publisher abstract)
Supporting personal relationships: supporting people who need care and support to have meaningful relationships
- Author:
- SKILLS FOR CARE
- Publisher:
- Skills for Care
- Publication year:
- 2017
- Pagination:
- 22
- Place of publication:
- Leeds
A guide to help employers to develop their staff to support people with learning disabilities their personal relationships, in a way that respects and values the individual. The guide highlights the importance of focusing on the benefits that personal relationships can bring, and providing support around what personal relationships mean to the person and how it fits in with their personal choices and needs. Sections of the guide cover the values and behaviours that social care workers need and what they need to know and understand to support people with their personal relationships in a person-centred way. It also explains what employers can do to support the development of their workforce and how to develop a workforce development programme to provide staff with the skills to support personal relationships. A good practice example provides details of a workshop run by The Avenues Group to train staff in personal relationships, sexuality and sex. Appendix provides handouts from the workshop. The guide has been developed with people who need care and support, their families and social care employers. (Edited publisher abstract)
Involve me: practical guide: how to involve people with profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD) in decision-making and consultation
- Authors:
- MENCAP, BRITISH INSTITUTE OF LEARNING DISABILITIES, RENTON FOUNDATION
- Publisher:
- Mencap
- Publication year:
- 2011
- Pagination:
- 72p.
- Place of publication:
- London
People with profound and multiple learning disabilities are some of the most excluded in society. The Involve Me project focuses on how to involve them in decision-making and consultation. This guide to how to involve people with profound and multiple learning disabilities is partly based on an independent evaluation of the Involve Me project. It includes a description of the 4 Involve Me sites and approaches to involvement, and a summary of recommendations from the evaluation. The guide covers involvement in choice and decision-making, capacity and consent for people with profound and multiple learning disabilities, the key Involve Me messages, and information about the accompanying DVD resource which contains information and materials to support the Involve Me key messages.
Working with families, friends and carers: a framework for adult social care employers
- Authors:
- SKILLS FOR CARE, AVENUES
- Publisher:
- Skills for Care
- Publication year:
- 2019
- Pagination:
- 26
- Place of publication:
- Leeds
This framework, developed in partnership with the Avenues Group, sets out good practice guidelines about the skills and knowledge adult social care staff need to work effectively with the families and carers of people who need care and support. The framework covers four areas: establishing positive relationships with families, friends and carers; recognising the importance of family relationships and your role in this; maintaining appropriate communication with families; and offering support to people who need care and support to maintain and manage family relationships. The framework can be used to help organisations design or commissioning training. It can also be used to review how services and staff are working with families and carers and identify what needs to improve. It is based on research carried out by Avenues Group with people who need care and support and their families. Links to a sample training session designed by the Avenues Group is included. (Edited publisher abstract)
Consenting adults? Guidance for professionals when considering rights and risks in sexual relationships involving people with a mental disorder
- Author:
- MENTAL WELFARE COMMISSION FOR SCOTLAND
- Publisher:
- Mental Welfare Commission for Scotland
- Publication year:
- 2011
- Pagination:
- 44p.
- Place of publication:
- Edinburgh
- Edition:
- Rev. ed.
The Mental Welfare Commission for Scotland is an independent organisation working to safeguard the rights and welfare of people with mental illness, learning disability or other mental disorder. This guidance was produced in response to legal, ethical and practical issues concerning sexual relationships raised with the Commission in its work with people with mental disorder and those involved in their care. The guidance is intended to provide a framework for discussion of issues that need to be considered when assessing risk and considering the need for intervention in a person's sexual life. It covers the legal framework, capacity to consent, significance of a person's diagnosis, sexual risks arising from a person's mental disorder or social situation, staff knowledge and attitudes, family attitudes, cultural or religious values, the living situation and support and protection, statutory investigative duties, intervention following investigation, and legal interventions.
Developments in direct payments
- Editors:
- LEECE Janet, BORNAT Joanna, (eds.)
- Publisher:
- Policy Press
- Publication year:
- 2006
- Pagination:
- 305p.
- Place of publication:
- Bristol
This book charts the change, critically evaluating progress, take-up, inclusion and access to direct payments by different user groups. With contributions from campaigners, academics, practitioners, direct payment users and personal assistants, the book: provides an overview of the history of direct payments; presents findings from key research into direct payments and disabled people, older people, carers, people with mental health problems, people with learning difficulties and disabled children; discusses the implementation and development of direct payments provision; compares developments in the UK with those in North America.
Direct choices: what councils need to make direct payments happen for people with learning disabilities
- Author:
- GREAT BRITAIN. Department of Health
- Publisher:
- Great Britain. Department of Health
- Publication year:
- 2004
- Pagination:
- 18p.
- Place of publication:
- London
The resource consists of information that councils will find helpful when seeking to enable people with learning disabilities to receive and use direct payments. It includes information on decision-making; on the management of a direct payment; on the provision of appropriate and accessible information; and on the support that people may need. It brings together existing information from a variety of sources, as well as using new information drawn directly from interviews with council direct payment staff, direct payment support groups and people currently using direct payments.
The multiple needs assessment and care management pack: homeless multiple needs partnership
- Author:
- PHOENIX HOUSE
- Publisher:
- Phoenix House
- Publication year:
- 2001
- Pagination:
- 26p.,floppy disc.
- Place of publication:
- London
The Multiple Needs Assessment and Care Management Package is a 27 page document which is designed as tool for the assessment of homeless people with mental health problems. It is accompanied by assessment forms contained on a 3.5” computer disc. The pack looks holistically at the presenting needs of an individual. It also enables assessors to: prioritise client needs; action those needs appropriately; and, to develop an effective evaluation process, i.e. working with clients on achievable, realistic goals, with scope for re-negotiation as required. The pack is designed on the assumption that the Assessor is competent in assessment practice and has a good understanding of the parameters that are involved.