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Dr Sarah Butchard Clinical Psychologist

Supporting Emotional Safety in Dementia. Dr Sarah Butchard Clinical Psychologist Mersey Care NHS Trust/ BPS Faculty for Psychology of Older People. Outline. Emotional Impact of receiving a diagnosis What is emotional safety? Frameworks to support emotional safety Practical examples

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Dr Sarah Butchard Clinical Psychologist

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  1. Supporting Emotional Safety in Dementia Dr Sarah Butchard Clinical Psychologist Mersey Care NHS Trust/ BPS Faculty for Psychology of Older People

  2. Outline • Emotional Impact of receiving a diagnosis • What is emotional safety? • Frameworks to support emotional safety • Practical examples • Future directions

  3. Perception of dementia

  4. Dementia Words

  5. Why is Stigma Important? • External stigma and stereotypes are often internalised impacting on the way a person feels about themselves. • Stigma can lead to the other S words: • Shame • Silence • Secrecy

  6. An Alternative

  7. How to get from A to B

  8. Emotional Safety • Many definitions of emotional safety. • Some common factors: • Involves relationships • Relies on trust • Feeling of being accepted • Able to just be • Allows people to feel able to be open , at ease and to develop.

  9. Why Emotional Safety? • Dementia services have traditionally focused on decline. • Encouraging emotional safety will be looking at people’s strengths and abilities.

  10. BioPsychoSocial Model Social Psychology Biology How I react How others react

  11. Kitwood’s Emotional Needs

  12. A Human Rights Based Approach

  13. Key factors • Maintaining personhood is the central aim of care provision • Key role of the carer is to reflect people’s humanity and social value • Promote independence • Knowledge of the person • Biographical and life story work • Partnership working • Subjective experience

  14. Practical examples

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