Counselling Skills in Palliative CareThis book is aimed at people working in palliative care, helping patients and families to manage and live with chronic and progressive illnesses where treatment is no longer aimed at a cure. Palliative care professionals are encouraged to work holistically, viewing themselves and their relationships with patients as significant therapeutic resources in their own right. The authors argue that sensitive counselling skills need to be used effectively by all palliative workers, not just by counsellors. |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... person in 1957 , and the first hospice , St Christopher's in London , opened a decade later . Hospices occu- pied buildings separate from hospitals and cancer wards , with their own staff comprising teams of nurses , therapists ...
... person in 1957 , and the first hospice , St Christopher's in London , opened a decade later . Hospices occu- pied buildings separate from hospitals and cancer wards , with their own staff comprising teams of nurses , therapists ...
Page 64
... person and may well have lost plans and confidence for the future that he may have harboured before illness when contemplating his retirement ( Davy 1999 ) . This loss of confidence in the future , and loss of a self - image as a ...
... person and may well have lost plans and confidence for the future that he may have harboured before illness when contemplating his retirement ( Davy 1999 ) . This loss of confidence in the future , and loss of a self - image as a ...
Page 153
John Davy, Susan Ellis. ' Who is this person ? ' ' How has this event affected their usual life - patterns and roles ? ' ' How does this person make me feel ? ' ' How do they view the future for themselves and others ...
John Davy, Susan Ellis. ' Who is this person ? ' ' How has this event affected their usual life - patterns and roles ? ' ' How does this person make me feel ? ' ' How do they view the future for themselves and others ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Joining the palliative care system | 17 |
Empowering patients finding goals and resources | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aaron Alessandra Amanda anger angry Anya Arbogast Asha avoid bereavement Bethany breast cancer cancer Cathy chemotherapy client clinical clinical supervision concerns conversation coping strategies counselling skills counsellor couple Crossover cues death develop discussion disease distress district nurse dying Easterman effective Elaine emotional empathic Errol euthanasia experience explore family members fear feedback feel frightened further genogram Hannah happening HCP's HCPs need healthcare Heather hospice hospice care illness important invite involved issues Ivan Jones Jordan Kenneth London loss Macmillan nurse Main learning points Marsha Marvin Matthew mean motor neurone disease non-judgemental occupational therapist Open University pain palliative care team partner patients and carers patients and families perhaps person possible problems profes professional psychosocial reassurance reflect relationship response role simply situation sometimes sorry specialist staff stoma Sylvie symptoms talk Tavistock Institute therapeutic things Timothy treatment tumour understand unhelpful worried
References to this book
EBOOK: Psychological Care for Ill and Injured People: A Clinical Guide Keith Nichols Limited preview - 2003 |
Medical and Psychiatric Issues for Counsellors Brian Daines,Linda Gask,Amanda Howe Limited preview - 2007 |