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Your search for all content returned 10 results

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  • Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging WorkforceGo to chapter: Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging Workforce

    Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging Workforce

    Chapter

    The aging population is at a state of development that is not as focused on employment, and thus has difficulty finding its place in a society that defines people by their careers. Research is needed on the issues of aging workers, such as training needs, career transition issues, and retirement planning. Research is also needed on which accommodations, workplace modifications, and changes to policies and practices positively impact the retention and continued productivity of an aging workforce. Counselor practitioners are in a unique position to contribute to needed research design conceptualization, metrics, and analyses to test the multiplicity of interventions we will be exploring in the coming years to keep our aging workforce healthy and intellectually engaged in the employment environment. Counselors are experientially qualified to provide the needed services to keep this population productive and more fully engaged in their communities and continuing employment.

    Source:
    The Psychological and Social Impact of Illness and Disability
  • Veterans Presenting With Multiple Trauma and DisabilitiesGo to chapter: Veterans Presenting With Multiple Trauma and Disabilities

    Veterans Presenting With Multiple Trauma and Disabilities

    Chapter

    The proper diagnosis and the delivery of quality services do not change because the veteran has military culture–related experiences. This chapter explores how rehabilitation services can be an integral part of the veteran’s overall plan of care, whether directed by the Veterans Administration or community, state, or other human services providers. It presents information on multiple trauma, military culture, military cultural competence, and unique challenges the military culture creates for veterans and their family members during transition. The chapter gives special attention to the needs of women veterans, especially military sexual trauma. Finally, the chapter focuses on specific, evidence-based strategies that can be utilized to support transition and reintegration of veterans with disabilities into their families, communities, and work spaces. Service members’ needs are best served when practitioners have military cultural competence and are able to work across disciplines to delivery evidence-based practices.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Intersection of Poverty and DisabilityGo to chapter: Intersection of Poverty and Disability

    Intersection of Poverty and Disability

    Chapter

    Poverty and disability are interconnected and are cyclical in nature. That is, persons with disabilities and chronic illnesses are disproportionately represented among those living in poverty and poverty disproportionately affects individuals with disabilities. Socioeconomic status is the most powerful predictor of chronic disease, disability, and mortality. The intersection between poverty and disability and chronic illness is influenced by a host of factors including employment status, educational attainment, lack of insurance, lack of access to medical care, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and gender identity. Persons with disabilities living in poverty may have to contend with multiple risks associated with limited resources, high stress, neurobehavioral effects, and exposure to various traumas. This chapter examines how poverty, disability, and chronic illness influence one another, describes the impact of poverty, contributing factors that precipitate and result from living in poverty, and the relationship between poverty and disability, and discusses implications and strategies for counseling.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Infectious Diseases and DisabilityGo to chapter: Infectious Diseases and Disability

    Infectious Diseases and Disability

    Chapter

    Humans are constantly being attacked by infectious agents. Although infectious diseases are conditions in-and-of themselves, they can accompany other disorders. In the 1990s several researchers raised the question of a link between infectious diseases and mental illness disorders to some unknown degree, asserting “a better understanding of the role of infection may speed treatment and prevention efforts and reduce the degree of disability and stigma associated with mental illness”. Others believe not only a link exists between mental illness and infectious disease but even where pathogenesis disregards the brain, a silent epidemic of mental illness often accompanies outbreaks of infectious diseases. This chapter discusses select infectious diseases in adults, and their causes and symptoms. It describes the significance of these diseases for adults with disabilities and implications for psychosocial adjustment, employment, and quality of life. Finally, it presents a glossary of terms to assist the reader.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Aging, Chronic Illness, and DisabilityGo to chapter: Aging, Chronic Illness, and Disability

    Aging, Chronic Illness, and Disability

    Chapter

    This chapter presents specific issues faced by older adults in response to adaptations to chronic illness and disability. Some individuals have congenital disabilities and others acquire a disability early in life and are able to adjust fairly easily, aging with their disability. On the other hand, some individuals acquire a disability later in life and may experience great difficulty making the adjustments to their condition. The chapter presents information on the age-related concerns of older adults, components and perceptions of aging, assessment issues associated with older adults, vocational interests, and death and dying perspectives. It also discusses the implications for service delivery in the context in which older adults are served along with laws and regulations that apply to the population. Aging and geriatric persons often utilize a variety of services from multiple entities (e.g., social, legal, medical, financial, and counseling).

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Interdisciplinary Service Delivery and Practice in Disability StudiesGo to chapter: Interdisciplinary Service Delivery and Practice in Disability Studies

    Interdisciplinary Service Delivery and Practice in Disability Studies

    Chapter

    This chapter serves as the foundation for exploration of the definition, history, framework, nature, and significance of interdisciplinary practice in counseling and human services to improve outcomes for clients. It discusses the concept of “interdisciplinary” and “disciplinary foundations” to construct interdisciplinary linkages. The chapter explores common core characteristics of human services practice across the disciplines of counseling, rehabilitation counseling, social work, psychology, and allied health. It presents the information (a) roles and functions, (b) values and ideas, (c) cultural competence, and (d) knowledge, skills, and competence in the shared areas of human growth and development, clinical assessment and evaluation, goals development and implementation, application of interventions and evidence-based practices, and ethics. It also identifies the strategies for establishing interdisciplinary collaboration across various human services, health, and behavioral disciplines. Finally, the chapter examines the challenges and benefits of interdisciplinary practice within human services practice.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Integrating Ethics Into Professional Decision-Making and Practice in Disability StudiesGo to chapter: Integrating Ethics Into Professional Decision-Making and Practice in Disability Studies

    Integrating Ethics Into Professional Decision-Making and Practice in Disability Studies

    Chapter

    Ethics refer to a standard that guides a professional’s behavior and practice in the performance of their duties or delivery of services. The standard is expected by all members of an organization or profession that is entrusted to serve. In addition, ethical standards are a minimum threshold that associations envision members must meet to ensure both credibility and safety to the public. It is equally important to understand what ethics is not. Although ethics informs laws and legal systems, ethics differ from laws, even though both are created by a society and are codified. This chapter addresses basic ethical principles that most professional fields espouse while integrating and connecting ethics, the active fiber connecting these disciplines, and acknowledging the intersectionality of both ethical behavior and several human services professional disciplines.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Adult Ex-Offender Populations With Chronic Illnesses and DisabilitiesGo to chapter: Adult Ex-Offender Populations With Chronic Illnesses and Disabilities

    Adult Ex-Offender Populations With Chronic Illnesses and Disabilities

    Chapter

    The prison system serves as an institution not only for punishment of crimes committed but as a facility for rehabilitation of offenders. The process of reentry or reintegration may be varied among ex-offenders owing to life circumstances and abilities and is rarely a linear process. Many adult ex-offenders have disabilities that may allow them to apply and qualify for vocational rehabilitation services such as psychiatric disorders, substance abuse and addiction problems, intellectual disabilities, chronic health issues, and dual diagnoses. This chapter presents evidence-based practices for assisting ex-offenders with disabilities from an interdisciplinary and a multiservice provision perspective. Information is presented on barriers to community reintegration including legal concerns, barriers to employment, employers’ hiring practices, and self-imposed barriers. The intent is to present the systematic ways in which ex-offenders with disabilities are unrecognized as vulnerable and marginalized populations that can benefit from an array of services.

    Source:
    Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach
  • Multicultural Rehabilitation Counseling: Optimizing Success With DiversityGo to chapter: Multicultural Rehabilitation Counseling: Optimizing Success With Diversity

    Multicultural Rehabilitation Counseling: Optimizing Success With Diversity

    Chapter

    Addressing diversity issues in rehabilitation service provision is an ethical imperative. What needs to be considered are the ways in which diversity can be achieved without stigmatizing the same clients who are supposed to benefit from services. This chapter enhances conceptual clarity in the use of terms descriptive of minority status in clients seeking rehabilitation services. It characterizes multicultural counseling as an essential approach to address diversity issues that impact the quality of rehabilitation services. The chapter then proposes the ways in which rehabilitation professionals may enhance cultural sensitivity in their education and practice, and addresses ethical issues in rehabilitation counseling practice for which the use of multicultural counseling approaches would be a solution. Client outcomes in rehabilitation are a product of an interaction between rehabilitation service capacity and client participation, and counseling outcomes improve as client participation increases.

    Source:
    Counseling Theories and Techniques for Rehabilitation and Mental Health Professionals
  • Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging WorkforceGo to chapter: Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging Workforce

    Key Concepts and Techniques for an Aging Workforce

    Chapter

    The aging population is likely to result in increasing numbers of people with disabilities in the workforce, who may have difficulty staying employed. Effective counseling practices must increasingly include attention to preparing both individuals and their workplaces for the impact of the aging process. Proactive education about ways to maximize the productivity of an aging workforce, effective case management, and workplace accommodations can significantly contribute to maximizing aging worker retention. A better understanding of aging is more closely aligned with the developmental model. Career development may be presented as a lifelong, dynamic process that requires individuals to engage throughout their lifetime in the ongoing assessment, analysis, and synthesis of information about the world of work and self. Counselor educators can prepare counselors-in-training for this task by including aging issues in the counselor education curriculum.

    Source:
    The Professional Counselor’s Desk Reference
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