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USA
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- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 9 - Jul 14
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Description
Support the Rights & Interests of Elderly ClientsCOURSE OVERVIEW: Welcome to the Support the Rights & Interests of Elderly Clients course. This program has been designed to equip you with the knowledge, ethical awareness and practical strategies required to uphold, protect and promote the rights of elderly clients across health, aged care and community service settings. You will explore international human rights frameworks, legal and ethical obligations, collaborative planning approaches and the
COURSE OVERVIEW:
Welcome to the Support the Rights & Interests of Elderly Clients course. This program has been designed to equip you with the knowledge, ethical awareness and practical strategies required to uphold, protect and promote the rights of elderly clients across health, aged care and community service settings. You will explore international human rights frameworks, legal and ethical obligations, collaborative planning approaches and the communication techniques required to advocate effectively for older people. Through this learning, you will strengthen your ability to ensure safety, dignity, autonomy and informed decision-making for every client.
This course begins by outlining how to work in collaboration with an elderly client to identify their interests, needs and rights. This learning area explains practical engagement techniques, supported decision-making principles, relationship-centred practice, and the importance of recognising the client as the primary decision-maker in their own care.
The next learning area focuses on how to advocate on behalf of an elderly client to achieve a specific outcome. This learning area examines individual advocacy, systemic advocacy, documentation requirements, escalation pathways and the communication methods required to ensure the client’s voice is accurately represented and respected.
The next learning area addresses how to support an elderly client through an organisational or legal complaints process. This learning area explains complaint rights, procedural fairness, internal review processes, external oversight bodies and how to ensure clients feel safe, informed and empowered throughout the process.
The next learning area introduces the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and explains how human needs and human rights intersect in aged care settings. This learning area examines foundational human rights frameworks, international instruments, and how these documents shape the expectations and responsibilities of care organisations and individual workers.
The next learning area explores legal and ethical considerations related to client rights and interests, including duty of care, mandatory reporting, privacy, confidentiality, disclosure, discrimination and informed consent. This learning area also clarifies the rights and responsibilities of clients, workers and organisations, and the ways in which these obligations influence everyday practice.
The next learning area examines common risks to client safety and wellbeing, including neglect, abuse, environmental hazards, social isolation and impaired decision-making. This learning area also emphasises the relevance of child protection requirements across all community services settings, including the duty of care when a child is not the primary client and how to recognise indicators of risk and respond appropriately to adult disclosures.
The next learning area focuses on discrimination, its forms and impacts, and the techniques used to address and prevent discriminatory behaviour. This learning area explains how to challenge bias, support equity, and promote inclusive service delivery.
The next learning area outlines the community resources, networks and referral options available to support elderly clients. This learning area explores multidisciplinary collaboration, referral pathways, advocacy services, financial counselling, elder abuse services and culturally specific supports.
The next learning area addresses the potential conflict between client needs and organisational requirements. This learning area explains how to balance ethical practice with policy expectations, how to negotiate options, and when escalation or formal advocacy is required.
The next learning area examines the differences between negotiation, advocacy and mediation. This learning area describes the distinct purposes of each approach and the techniques involved when facilitating client rights while maintaining professional boundaries and organisational standards.
The next learning area explores empowerment versus disempowerment and highlights how worker behaviour, communication choices, organisational systems and cultural attitudes can either enhance or diminish a client’s autonomy. This learning area focuses on practical methods to ensure clients feel respected, heard and in control of their own care decisions.
By the end of this course you will be able to collaborate effectively with elderly clients, advocate ethically and confidently on their behalf, support them through complex complaints processes, apply human rights principles to everyday practice, meet legal and ethical obligations, recognise and reduce risks to wellbeing, address discrimination, utilise community resources, and apply negotiation, advocacy and mediation techniques to uphold client rights and strengthen their independence and dignity.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
By the end of this course, you will be able to understand:
- How to work in collaboration with a client to identify their interests, needs and rights?
- How to advocate on behalf of a client to achieve a specific outcome?
- How to support a client throughout an organisational or legal complaints process?
- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- The relationship between human needs and human rights
- The human rights frameworks, approaches, instruments
- The legal and ethical considerations related to facilitation of client rights and interests and how these impact individual workers
- The duty of care, human rights, mandatory reporting, discrimination, privacy, confidentiality and disclosure, informed consent, organisation and legal complaints processes
- The rights and responsibilities of clients, workers and organisations
- The common risks to client safety and wellbeing
- The relevance of child protection across all health and community services contexts
- The duty of care when child is not the client, indicators of risk and adult disclosure
- The actions that constitute discrimination and techniques for addressing it
- The types of community resources, networks and referral options relevant to the nature of client service
- The potential conflict between client needs and organisation requirements
- The differences between negotiation, advocacy, mediation
- The negotiation, advocacy, mediation techniques for the facilitation of client rights
- The differences between empowerment and disempowerment
COURSE DURATION:
The typical duration of this course is approximately 2-3 hours to complete. Your enrolment is Valid for 12 Months. Start anytime and study at your own pace.
ASSESSMENT:
A simple 10-question true or false quiz with Unlimited Submission Attempts.
CERTIFICATION:
Upon course completion, you will receive a customised digital “Certificate of Completion”.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
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Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
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