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Changing Minds: An Introduction to Person-Centered Care

Who is this video for?

Our video is for a variety of audiences. Potential viewers include:

  • Direct care workers in training
  • All staff in organizations beginning to adopt person-centered practices
  • New employees in person-centered organizations
  • Families of consumers served by person-centered organizations
  • Board members of person-centered organizations
  • All staff in person-centered organizations needing a “refresher” on PCC philosophy and practice

How to use this video

The video can be viewed in its entirety, or viewed in three separate segments to stimulate discussion and presentation of other materials and information. Groups or individuals can answer the questions posed in the training guide.

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Changing Minds: An Introduction to Person-Centered Care

We've provided links below to various topical segments of the video. Each link will take you to YouTube and begin the video where each topic is covered. Following the introduction, the body of the video is divided into three segments:

Introduction

What is PCC?

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Why do PCC?

Where do we begin?

Discussion Questions

The video can be viewed in its entirety, or viewed in three separate segments to stimulate discussion and presentation of other materials and information. Groups or individuals can answer the questions posed below.

What is person-centered care?

What do you consider to be the essence of person centered care? Why?

What obstacles or constraints exist that make giving person-centered care difficult?

How would you recommend tackling those obstacles or constraints?

What choices have you made today that you would not have gotten to make in a traditional long-term care setting?

Why do PCC?

What are the rewards of providing person-centered care for residents/consumers? For staff? For the entire organization?

How does person-centered care impact the daily work of staff?

How can leaders/managers provide person-centered care?

Where do we begin PCC?

What has happened recently in our organization that is reflective of person-centered care?

Are there ways to build upon this? What ideas do you have?

What problems occur that might be handled differently if you became really creative in seeking a person-centered care solution?

If you had to receive long-term care from your organization, what would be the most important aspects of the care you received?

How do you think you would measure the quality of your life?

Are there things you would like to see changed? How? Why?

Scripps Gerontology Center

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100 Bishop Circle
Oxford, OH 45056