If professionals have negative thoughts about their service users, it will affect the way they treat and care for them, This will not promote an anti discriminatory practice because the service user is being treated differently due to the service providers own opinions and views. Past events can affect anti-discriminatory practice being put in place; an example of this could be that if the service provider has experienced something awful in their caring situation of a certain ethnic background, there are chances of the service provider failing to provide an active and caring service to the user. Health and well being can also influence the way the service providers provide care for the service users. An example of this could be that if the patient is gay and the service provider puts their health documents at the bottom because they don’t want to treat a gay person. This will not promote an anti discriminatory practice because the service provider is failing to treat the person because of their sexual orientation.
She simply rebuts that one needs to have a better reason to not save a life than to just be ethically disgusted. The problem is not the arguments she uses as counterarguments towards her critics, but the tone of mockery she takes when answering each argument. She seems to disregard them as if they were pointless and worthless. Satel also uses analogies to compare different situations in which people agree to monetary or other kind of compensation. She gives the example of charities; where she explains that even though they rely on the work of volunteers, they also have the need of pay workers.
He calls self-esteem, "the sociometer model." Poor interaction symptoms result from a person’s fear of societal rejection. According to Leary, increasing the person’s sense of belonging to a social group solves the problem. The group need not regard the person highly, they must simply include the person. Once this occurs, the patient’s symptoms begin to disappear and his self-esteem
They may find it difficult to carry out physical tasks due to sensory loss. A person is unique and may have had different life experiences which means the way dementia affects them is personal to them. They have different likes/ dislikes and needs so we must try to meet these the best we can. 1.3 A person with dementia may feel excluded from society because the way they are treated by other's. They may not be given the oppourtunity to be involved just because other's haven't got the time of day for them.
Discrimination can also happen in-directly for example; a trip is planned and a service user needs specialist equipment to participate, the trip planned can not provide the equipment needed. This results in the service user being unable to go. This service user has been discriminated against. In supporting a persons equality we are treating that person as our equal, understanding that they have the right to be treated fairly and with equal opportunities to education, housing, employment and health and social care. This can help the person to feel valued and not set apart from others, this in turn will reduce any discrimination.
This rule is just a hope (possibility) that someday each person will treat everyone else with kindness and will receive kindness from others. Ultimately, the core idea of The Golden Rule is just about dealing (treating) people with owns perspective. But in practice, people are not alike. They have personality differences. As a result, this rule is not well enough to be implemented in our personal life as well as professional life.
Being able to have this choice allows the patient to maintain some control over their devastating situation. People have different opinions and the quality of life is a very personal one. When a health care professional tries to convince a patient to live they are acting as if they are their parent's telling them what to do. Patients usually trust their physicians and what they say can be wrong and persuasive. Physicians do not like to admit when they cannot diagnose something or fix a problem.
This would lower Femi’s self-esteem because she blame the discrimination that she receives on her self which could make her question her self-identity. A short term effect of this treatment could be that she loses confidence, which could then mean she becomes isolated. A long term effect of this treatment/discrimination is that Femi could end up self harming, this could be due to the isolation caused and the way she has been made to feel, if her feelings grow stronger and she self harms more she could stop her counselling and physiotherapy and even though things in her home country are bad she may want to leave and end up going back which would put her in more
If a patient needs treatment but they are not covered, that may motivate a counselor to place an incorrect billing code on an invoice to get paid for an non-covered service. While the counselor may believe this to be the best thing for the client, it is not ethically or legally allowed. This behavior actually hurts the industry as more regulation will be placed upon the counselor who will have to take more time to prove their compliance. That time they are using to prove compliance is time they are not seeing clients or generating revenue. One aspect of counseling that is very helpful is the licensure that is granted to counselors by the state.
The belief in the caregiver will encourage the patient follow the plan of care benefiting both patient and caregiver. If the caregiver or patient is perceived in a negative perspective, patient or caregiver, healthcare communication fails creating a negative effect on caregiver and patient. Healthcare communication can happen in different forms and can be as simple as a person’s posture or facial expression. A negative attitude shown by a caregiver can make a patient feel inadequate in the situation and unable to participate in his or her care. A negative attitude of a patient can create doubt in the caregiver that the patient has a desire or even know how to participate in his or her care.