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Levels of Clientele

This document defines different levels of clientele in healthcare including individuals, families, and community or population groups. It describes individuals as both clients and patients. Family is considered the basic unit of care and various family types are outlined such as nuclear, single-parent, blended, etc. The functions, roles, tasks and stages of families are also defined. Finally, community and population groups are described as levels of clientele that share common characteristics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
242 views

Levels of Clientele

This document defines different levels of clientele in healthcare including individuals, families, and community or population groups. It describes individuals as both clients and patients. Family is considered the basic unit of care and various family types are outlined such as nuclear, single-parent, blended, etc. The functions, roles, tasks and stages of families are also defined. Finally, community and population groups are described as levels of clientele that share common characteristics.

Uploaded by

吹雪黒雪姫
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LEVELS OF CLIENTELE

● Client
- a person who is a recipient of professional service
- a recipient of healthcare regardless of the state of health
- a patient

● Patient
- comes from the greek work “pathos” which means “passion” or “suffering” and
from the stem “pathein” which means “to suffer”
- most commonly known as a person waiting for or undergoing medical treatment

● Levels of Clientele
- Individual
+ both seen as clients and patients during homevisits, school clinic,
consultation, and workplace clinic visits
+ consult in a healthcare facility and receive healthcare services in different
forms
- Family
+ Definition:
- a group of people related by blood, marriage, or adoption living
together (US Census Bureau, 2002)
- 2 or more people living in the same household (usually), share a
common emotional bond, and perform certain interrelated social
tasks (Spradley & Alexander, 2000)
+ As a Client:
- family is first and individuals are second
+ As a System:
- focus is on the family as client, and the family is viewed as an
interacting system in which the whole is more than the sum of its
parts
- simultaneously focuses on individual members and the family as a
whole
+ 2 major functions: Reproduction and Socialization
+ Considered as: the basic unit of care
+ 2 basic family structures: Orientation and Procreation
+ Family Types:
- Dyad:
● a married man and woman
- Nuclear:
● a married man and woman with a child/children
● advantages: ability to provide support to family members;
genuine affection
● disadvantages: few family members to offer support and
share burden with
- Binuclear:
● post-divorced family in which biological children are
members of two nuclear households, both that of the
mother and of the father
● children alternate between two homes
● parents have equal responsibilities and legal rights
- Cohabitation:
● heterosexual couple who live together as a family but
remain unmarried
● may be temporary, long-lasting and as meaningful as more
traditional alliance
● offers as much psychological comfort and financial security
as a marriage
- Extended:
● Multigenerational Family
● advantages: contains more people to serve as resources
during crisis; provides more role models for behavior or
values
● disadvantages: family resources both financial and
psychological must be stretched to; accommodate all
members
- Single-parent:
● advantages: close relationship between parent and child;
child independence and self-reliance
● disadvantages: no back-up person; no support person;
decreased financial stability; difficulty in role modeling
● “Identifying the custodial parent is important in signing
consent forms.”
- Blended:
● remarriage and reconstituted
● a divorce or widowed person with a child/children marries
someone who also has children
● advantages: increased security and resources; children
are exposed to different ways of life thus becoming more
adaptive to new situations
● disadvantages: rivalry may arise among children; children
may not welcome the step parent; children may become
distressed at seeing their biological parent
- Communal:
● comprise of groups of people who have chosen to live
together as an extended family
● relationship to each other is motivated by social or religious
values rather than kinship
- Gay/Lesbian:
● a homosexual union
● individuals of the same sex live together as partners
● may include children
● offers support in times of crisis
- Foster:
● adopted children with a legal paper (orphans)
● disadvantages: children may experience almost constant
insecurity and may have some emotional difficulties
- Adoptive:
● adopted children even without a legal paper
+ Functions:
- Socialization of children
- Economic
- Care, supervision, monitoring, and interaction
- Reproduction
- Legitimizing sexual relations
- Affection, emotional support, and companionship
+ Roles:
- Wage Earner
- Financial Manager
- Problem-Solver
- Decision Maker
- Nurturer
- Health Manager
- Gatekeeper
+ Tasks:
- Physical Maintenance
- Socialization of Family Members
- Allocation of Resources
- Maintenance of Order
- Division of Labor
- Reproduction, Recruitment, and Existence of Family Members
(Acceptance)
- Placement of Members into the Larger Society
- Maintenance of Motivation and Morale (help, defend, support, and
sense of pride)
+ Stages and Tasks:
- Stage I: Marriage and the Family
● 3 tasks: establish a mutually satisfying relationship; learn
to relate; if applicable, engage in a reproductive life
planning
- Stage II: The Early Child Bearing Family
● birth or adoption of the 1st baby
- Stage III: The Family with Preschool Children
● demands a great deal of time related to their growth and
developmental needs and safety considerations
- Stage IV: The Family with School-Age Children
- Stage V: The Family with Adolescent Children
● loosening family ties is the major task
● major health concern is safety
● major causes of adolescent deaths: violence/accidents,
suicide, homicide
- Stage VI: The Launching Center Family
● the children leave to establish their osn households
- Stage VII: The Family of the Middle Aged Parents
● a family returns to a two-partner nuclear unit
● The Prime of Time (opportunity to travel, economic
independence)
● “Empty Nest Syndrome”
- Stage VIII: The Family in Retirement or Older Age
● the individuals are more apt to suffer from chronic and
disabling conditions than younger people
● can take care of their grandchildren
- Community
+ group of people sharing common geographic boundaries and/or common
values and interests within a specific social system
- Population Group
+ share common characteristics, developmental stage, or common
exposure to particular environmental factors like common health
problems, issues, and concerns

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