Medical

Smoking And Lung Cancer In Turning Point Treatment Centre

Plan of Action

  • Build Foundation

I will introduce myself to Sven as William Snyder, a counselor at the Turning Point Treatment Centre, a rehabilitation center. I continue building trust with the client by Conducting a thorough assessment to clearly understand all aspects of the problem. My body language is proficient and demonstrates transparency. I need Sven to realize that our advising session is a collective exertion, so we will cooperate in finding a health plan that works for him to quit smoking and may improve how his lung cancer disease. I will request that Sven reveal to me a smidgen about how he is managing his analyzed lung disease and how he feels about his well-being. I would ask Sven about any goals that he is thinking of to get from this counseling session.

  • Gathering Data

This was already being discussed in the building foundation stage, but I will ask Sven about his diagnosis and what he thinks about it. How he thinks he can cope with his disease. I will then proceed to tell him I will be collecting a medical history. I will ask Sven to take me through his routine so that I can know how many cigarettes he smokes in a day. Then, I will define the problem to Sven, what is happening to him, and why it is happening, “what I hear from you is that you are addicted to smoking cigarettes, which leads you to be diagnosed with lung cancer.”

  • Determine

Goals/Education

What would you like the result of our session to be? What might you want to achieve before leaving the last recovery session? How would you trust this directing can affect your well-being long haul?

After the patient gives his objectives, I will present my own. I will prescribe some transient plans to be tied in with expanding information in regard to medical problems and substitutes for the dependence. I will then move on to the training bit of the guiding session. Amid this time, I will show Sven a smidgen about how to control and adapt to the wretchedness and how basic it can be to take control over you.

  1. Allow the client to discuss alternatives. If Sven mentions that he cannot smoke at once, I may offer an option such as whenever you feel like smoking a cigarette, use any substitute like an e-cigarette, which will help him quit smoking.
  2. Closing/Reaching Commitment

Right before the last session, I will make sure to express that I believe in Sven and that he is capable of this major change. I will review his weaknesses, which are relying on smoking to cope with the depression so that he can try to overcome his weaknesses. I will also emphasize his good qualities, which are his strengths, such as he is staggeringly responsive to learning and willing to roll out a few improvements. I will advise him that he should try to incorporate healthier activities. I will indicate trust in him that he can do it to make an impact on his well-being in the future. I will disclose to Sven that we are just about completed and summarize the objectives we examined and the answers to accomplish them. I will plan an opportunity to meet again before the session ends.

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