Friday, November 4, 2016

Person-Centred Counselling for People With Dementia: Making Sense of Self by Danuta Lipinska *Collection Books »RTF

Person-Centred Counselling for People With Dementia: Making Sense of Self Based on the author's own experiences of counselling people with dementia, the book covers the fundamentals of the counselling process and precisely what a person-centred approach entails. The author


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Person-Centred Counselling for People With Dementia: Making Sense of Self

Title:Person-Centred Counselling for People With Dementia: Making Sense of Self
Author:Danuta Lipinska
Rating:4.94 (767 Votes)
Asin:1843109786
Format Type:Paperback
Number of Pages:122 Pages
Publish Date:2009-02-15
Genre:

Although currently many people with dementia are not given the opportunity to receive professional counselling, this book explores the value of counselling for men and women living with this condition and how it enables them to make sense of their lives and their notions of themselves. The author explores the pervasive myth that all experiences of living with dementia are entirely negative and shows counsellors and carers how a person-centred counselling experience can have positive outcomes for those with dementia and the people who care for them. Based on the author's own experiences of counselling people with dementia, the book covers the fundamentals of the counselling process and precisely what a person-centred approach entails. The book then brings together several theories of counselling such as the role of the 'spiritual' in the counselling relationship; working with concepts of relational depth and configurations of Self; and the author's own theories of relating to a person's

Editorial : The importance of this short book is out of proportion to its size It is the fruit of over 20 years of counselling experience by one individual in the United Kingdom, and United States of America; years in which she has been a pioneer in providing a one-to-one service for persons with dementia, and also working with family members It is difficult to do justice to this book in a brief review. It is the kind I go through with pencil poised to underline a word, a phrase or sentence this is a book that you cannot afford to be without. -- The Journal of Ageing & Society Lipinska's book is both heartening, as there is a dearth of such services in the UK, and timely, with new National Strategies for Dementia published in England and imminent in Scotland (where dementia is already a priority) offering hope that this situation will change. -- HCPJ (Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherepy Journal) This is a worthwhile read and certainly succeeds in making the point that people with dementia are

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