This document discusses ethics, psychosocial aspects, and rehabilitation related to HIV/AIDS. It defines ethics as moral codes based on respect for human life. Ten ethical principles are outlined, including respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and confidentiality. Psychosocial issues for HIV clients include stigma, discrimination, denial of diagnosis, feelings of vulnerability and death-related concerns. Occupational therapy and vocational rehabilitation programs aim to help HIV clients engage in meaningful occupations and secure employment through a four-phase process. Benefits of rehabilitation include giving people a role, structure, self-esteem, and distraction from trauma.
This document discusses ethics, psychosocial aspects, and rehabilitation related to HIV/AIDS. It defines ethics as moral codes based on respect for human life. Ten ethical principles are outlined, including respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and confidentiality. Psychosocial issues for HIV clients include stigma, discrimination, denial of diagnosis, feelings of vulnerability and death-related concerns. Occupational therapy and vocational rehabilitation programs aim to help HIV clients engage in meaningful occupations and secure employment through a four-phase process. Benefits of rehabilitation include giving people a role, structure, self-esteem, and distraction from trauma.
This document discusses ethics, psychosocial aspects, and rehabilitation related to HIV/AIDS. It defines ethics as moral codes based on respect for human life. Ten ethical principles are outlined, including respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and confidentiality. Psychosocial issues for HIV clients include stigma, discrimination, denial of diagnosis, feelings of vulnerability and death-related concerns. Occupational therapy and vocational rehabilitation programs aim to help HIV clients engage in meaningful occupations and secure employment through a four-phase process. Benefits of rehabilitation include giving people a role, structure, self-esteem, and distraction from trauma.
This document discusses ethics, psychosocial aspects, and rehabilitation related to HIV/AIDS. It defines ethics as moral codes based on respect for human life. Ten ethical principles are outlined, including respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and confidentiality. Psychosocial issues for HIV clients include stigma, discrimination, denial of diagnosis, feelings of vulnerability and death-related concerns. Occupational therapy and vocational rehabilitation programs aim to help HIV clients engage in meaningful occupations and secure employment through a four-phase process. Benefits of rehabilitation include giving people a role, structure, self-esteem, and distraction from trauma.
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WELCOME
LEGAL,ETHICAL, PSYCHOSOCIAL & REHABILITATION ISSUES RELATED TO HIV/ AIDS
PRESENTED BY: SUSHRUTA MOHAPATRA
MSc nursing 2nd year DEFINITION
According to Melanie and Evelyn
“Ethics refers to the moral code for nursing and is based on obligation to service and respect for human life”. Ethics are the rules or principles that govern right conduct and are designed to protect the rights of human beings. ETHICAL PRINCIPLES 1. RESPECT FOR PERSON 2. RESPECT FOR AUTONOMY 3. RESPECT FOR FREEDOM 4. RESPECT FOR BENEFICENCE (DOING GOOD) 5. RESPECT FOR NON- MALFEASANCE (AVOIDING HARM TO OTHERS) 6. RESPECT FOR VERACITY (TRUTH TELLING) 7. RESPECT FOR JUSTICE (FAIR AND EQUAL TREATMENT) 8. RESPECT FOR RIGHTS 9. RESPECT FOR FIDELITY (FULFILLING PROMISES) 10. CONFIDENTIALITY (PROTECTING PRIVILEGED INFORMATION) LEGAL & ETHICAL ISSUES PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS OF HIV CLIENT • It means social stigma, discrimination which has a bad impact over the psychology of the HIV affected women. • HIV Stigma can be defined as an act of identifying, labelling or attributing undesirable qualities targeted towards those who are perceived as being shamefully different from the social ideal. • People with HIV/AIDS are stigmatized and discriminated against for many reasons, including the following: • HIV is a slow, incurable disease that eventually results in suffering and death. • Many people regard HIV as a death sentence. CONT….. •The public often poorly understands how HIV is transmitted and is irrationally afraid of acquiring HIV from people infected with it. •HIV transmission is often associated with violations of social mores regarding proper sexual relationships, so people with HIV are associated with having done something “bad.” Cont…. •Therapeutic protocols are lacking for anti- HIV medications that could control the spread of the epidemic and prolong lives. •Even if stigma is minimized an incurable and often fatal disease requires enormous psychosocial adjustments. •They commonly go through an initial stage of denial in which they do not acknowledge having the disease or deny its likely consequences. • HIV threatens a person’s life, goals, expectations and significant relationships, no wonder that many people are reluctant to admit their diagnosis or their risk of infection. People who subject themselves to high- risk situations or behaviours commonly deny that they are at risk of HIV infection. They often avoid testing, and if they are tested they avoid following up on results, as if avoiding a clinical diagnosis might prevent the disease. • HIV disease can be characterized as producing three major psychological concerns: A perception of HIV as a threat Feelings of vulnerability and loss of control Death-related concerns. Other psychological mechanisms 1. Denial-- total refusal of acknowledging the truth of HIV infection 2. Splitting -- always present, to a lesser or greater extent because it allows some degree of dissociation and denial 3. Limitation of the ability to process and integrate symbols. REHABLITATION IN HIV CLIENT OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY & VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION FOR INDIVIDUALS LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS • Occupational therapy enables individuals to engage in the occupations that are meaningful to them in order to achieve the optimum quality of life for that individual. Occupational therapy can have a crucial role in assisting persons living with HIV/AIDS to re- engage with life, particularly through vocational rehabilitation programmes.
• Vocational rehabilitation was defined by the Canadian Labour Office
in 1973 as "the continuous and coordinated process of rehabilitation which involves the provision of those vocational services designed to enable a disabled person to secure and retain suitable employment" A four-phase programme was designed by Grossman and Bortone in 1986 based on the Model of Human Occupation which includes both individual therapy and group education and support sessions. The phases are as follows: 1. First phase: It allows clients to explore and foster the necessary daily habits and work skills to support a vocational role. 2. Second phase: It allows further development of skills and habits through various voluntary work placements. These experiences helped the client to determine his or her tolerance for work and how fatigue and the side effects of various medications affected work performance.
3. Third phase: It allows the clients to be placed in paid employment
or returned to or entered formal education or job-training programmes. 4. Fourth phase: It is concerned with long-term support, follow-up and the availability of the programme’s staff to intervene and provide support as necessary. Benefits of rehabilitation Creek in 2002 identified a number of benefits of rehabilitation to the individual these are as follows: •Giving people a role in society •A means of earning •Giving structure and purpose •Providing a source of self-esteem •Social interaction •Interest and satisfaction. •provides a routine and a distraction away from the traumas of diagnosis or infection. SUMMARY
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