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OverviewClinicians, managers and researchers - as well as politicians and religious leaders - are worrying about a lack of compassion and humanity in the care of vulnerable people in society. In this book The author explores the dynamics of care. He argues that we know how to do it, but somehow we seem to keep getting it wrong. Poor care in hospitals and c Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tim DartingtonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367325497ISBN 10: 0367325497 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 31 July 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSeries Editor’s Preface -- Preface -- Individual Survival and Organizational Life -- Thinking about systems of care -- The gang in the organization -- Self and identity: defences against vulnerability -- The question of dependency -- The pursuit of common unhappiness -- The Survival of the Unfittest -- The management challenge -- The isolation of care services -- Mediating between systems -- The case for integration -- Human nature and organizational change -- True and false relationship in health and social care -- The costs of care -- The Personal and the Professional -- An Alzheimer’s case study -- My unfaithful brain: a journey into Alzheimer’s Disease -- Learning to live with dementia -- Two weeks in 2006 -- The realities of care -- Postscript—learning from experience -- Conclusions -- Reflections on partnership: can we allow systems to care?ReviewsDartington, a consultant and social science researcher in health and social care who is an associate at the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in Britain, describes how the systems of care can encourage or inhibit the natural processes of compassion and care that affect people's everyday experiences of vulnerability at different stages of life, such as older people, people with learning and physical disabilities, and children. He discusses the changes in institutional and community care over the past 40 years; a systems psychodynamics approach to understanding the management of care; the characteristics of care systems, such as management, the isolation of services, human nature and organizational change, and costs, and the need for integration of systems; and a case study of what happened when his wife developed dementia. -- (04/01/2012) A unique, intelligent and passionate text about the many ways we - as individuals and as society - try to evade, actually hate, facing the facts of helplessness. Public services designed to provide rapid positive outcomes become clumsy when dealing with deterioration, yet that is where our humanity is tested. And we will be there ourselves, one day. Tim Dartington reveals the wisdom of decades of experience as a Tavistock social scientist, with painful examples from his consultancy practice of life at the front line, then gives a brilliant account of his attempts to get coherent help for his wife, Anna, as she became demented in middle age. With comments from Anna herself, this is very moving. A learned account of defences against vulnerability laced with deadpan irony creates irresistible and instructive reading for all who use or provide public services. --Dr Sebastian Kraemer, Consultant Psychiatrist Original, absorbing, unsettling and beautifully written, Managing Vulnerability is an important book for anyone dealing seriously with the predicaments of caring institutions or who is concerned with renewing the capacity of society to address profound human need. Tim Dartington brings to light the social and psychological matrix that shapes our systems of care and how today's cultural context, which so often de-values dependence, creates debilitating cross currents for leaders and managers of organizations providing care. This book provides a penetrating account of how emotions associated with the work of caring find their way into the structure, informal processes, and functioning of modern caring institutions. --James Krantz, PhD, Principal, Worklab Consulting, NYC; Past President, International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations (ISPSO) A unique, intelligent and passionate text about the many ways we - as individuals and as society - try to evade, actually hate, facing the facts of helplessness. Public services designed to provide rapid positive outcomes become clumsy when dealing with deterioration, yet that is where our humanity is tested. And we will be there ourselves, one day. Tim Dartington reveals the wisdom of decades of experience as a Tavistock social scientist, with painful examples from his consultancy practice of life at the front line, then gives a brilliant account of his attempts to get coherent help for his wife, Anna, as she became demented in middle age. With comments from Anna herself, this is very moving. A learned account of defences against vulnerability laced with deadpan irony creates irresistible and instructive reading for all who use or provide public services. --Dr Sebastian Kraemer, Consultant Psychiatrist Dartington, a consultant and social science researcher in health and social care who is an associate at the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in Britain, describes how the systems of care can encourage or inhibit the natural processes of compassion and care that affect people's everyday experiences of vulnerability at different stages of life, such as older people, people with learning and physical disabilities, and children. He discusses the changes in institutional and community care over the past 40 years; a systems psychodynamics approach to understanding the management of care; the characteristics of care systems, such as management, the isolation of services, human nature and organizational change, and costs, and the need for integration of systems; and a case study of what happened when his wife developed dementia. -- (04/01/2012) Original, absorbing, unsettling and beautifully written, Managing Vulnerability is an important book for anyone dealing seriously with the predicaments of caring institutions or who is concerned with renewing the capacity of society to address profound human need. Tim Dartington brings to light the social and psychological matrix that shapes our systems of care and how today's cultural context, which so often de-values dependence, creates debilitating cross currents for leaders and managers of organizations providing care. This book provides a penetrating account of how emotions associated with the work of caring find their way into the structure, informal processes, and functioning of modern caring institutions. --James Krantz, PhD, Principal, Worklab Consulting, NYC; Past President, International Society for the Psychoanalytic Study of Organizations (ISPSO) Author InformationDartington, Tim Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |