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Difference between revisions of "Six Pressing Issues when Living in Residential Care"

From Clicklaw Wikibooks
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“Abuse” and “neglect “in residential care generally means a deliberate intention to harm a resident, or a high degree of recklessness or indifference to the resident.  Any other harms resulting from lack of understanding, poor procedures or documentation, inadequate training, or inadequate staffing are more commonly characterized as “quality of care” concerns or issues related to “non-compliance with standards”.  However,  the line between neglect and poor quality of care is not always clear in residential care.
“Abuse” and “neglect “in residential care generally means a deliberate intention to harm a resident, or a high degree of recklessness or indifference to the resident.  Any other harms resulting from lack of understanding, poor procedures or documentation, inadequate training, or inadequate staffing are more commonly characterized as “quality of care” concerns or issues related to “non-compliance with standards”.  However,  the line between neglect and poor quality of care is not always clear in residential care.


The terms “abuse “ and “neglect “ as used in the  Residential Care Regulations  are also somewhat different than those used by the Adult Guardianship Act, where the definitions are statutory thresholds for action and focus on deliberate harms causing significant loss. See Figure 1.
The terms “abuse “ and “neglect “ as used in the  Residential Care Regulations  are also somewhat different than those used by the Adult Guardianship Act, where the definitions are statutory thresholds for action and focus on deliberate harms causing significant loss. See Figure 1. The Residential Care Regulations (s. 52 (2))also prohibit the use of food or fluids as a reward; they are considered a type of mistreatment.


===Figure 1===
===Figure 1===