Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Maslow Case Study

Maslow Case Study 15 1) Cindys first stratum of look was a very trying one, and according to Maslow, the primary unavoidably on her hierarchy were non being sufficiently met. The first strike is to take a shit physiologic indispensabilitys satisfied for sheer survival purposes, such as receiving adequate aliment, water, elimination and sleep. Maslow explained that for a person not receiving these things, their idea of a perfect place would be one where thither is plenty of food and water and they can sleep and eliminate whenever they want if they had all of these things they would deal that they would be perfectly content and happy.For many, these needs are easily satisfied, just now for Cindy this was not the case. The physician who performed Cindys checkups noted that she was not developing at the rate of normal infants her age, so she immediately suspected neglect, which would include not giving Cindy adequate nutrition. Since everyone of her checkups were late and infr equent, the physician began to question the amount of reflection Cindy was receiving and learned that it was nowhere near enough for a child her age.Cindy had too developed a sever diaper rash accompanied by a yeast infect by the third check up which the physician was also very concerned about. The need to be physically well would also fall under the physiologic needs. Although Cindys physiological needs were not fully satisfied, degrees of satisfaction would vacate Cindy to have the needs of former(a) stages working at the same time. Safety needs, or the need to feel a sense of structure, order, security and predictability, are next on Maslows hierarchy.Cindys nonplus was said to be a 40 year old drug addict who live in a relatively poor neighborhood that placed African Americans and Latinos, mostly. The mother had no inhabitation of her own and did not know who the father was, she would move from house to house where her friends would put her up for a little while. The mothe r would also hold up with the grandmother from time to time. This constant moving, with no home of her own, inadequate nutrition, no love or affection shown and no predictability from day to day would by all odds show that Cindys safety needs were not satisfied.The third need, the need for belongingness and love, was obviously also not satisfied. Her mother neglected her so some(prenominal) that on one occasion Cindy was dehydrated to the point of medical danger. in one case she was finally fostered, her initial foster family was able to provide her with sufficient physiological and safety needs, however, they still did not provide belongingness and love. They showed her little affection and seldom held her or talked to her.By the end of Cindys first year, she looked as if she were scarcely 6 months old developmentally. Also, when the family moved to another state they had no proneness to adopt her, which also showed how little they attentiond for her emotionally. The outcome of Cindys first trying year of life was severe underdevelopment in which she could barley crawl at one year, an aversion to affection where Cindy would cringe at someones touch, and a sense of uncertainty and shyness to her. ) During Cindys second year of life, she was placed with a much better foster family would not only fulfilled her needs for survival and safety, they were also very gentle. The family had two other daughters, who were trilled to have a baby sister to take care of, the mother stayed at home with the kids during the day and the father was there in the unconstipatedings when the mother was working four nights a week inside the home. Cindy had a clean, quiet environment where she was exposed to other children.She was also shown a destiny of affection, which at first she resisted, but eventually she began to become accustom to it and even began seeking it out and developed more rapidly. By the time she was sustainment with this family for six months, she had cau ght up to the development of children her age. Once Cindys biological mother overdosed and died, the option for adoption was there and the new family happily accepted Cindy into there life permanently. The outcome of all of this was that Cindy became a happy, confident child on the same level as other children her age. ) According to Maslow, if Cindy were to actualize, the type of set she would have to embrace would include an acceptance of herself, others and of nature in general, which would allow her not to feel a sense of anxiety, shame or transgression due to her situation as a child. Also, autonomy, appreciation for life events, creativeness from an openness to experience and spontaneity, an unhostile sense of humor and a strong ethical sense would all be values Cindy would have to embrace to be a self-actualizer.There are other characteristics that Maslow listed as belonging to these types o people, but these have a more immediate relationship to Cindy and her upbringing. Her azoic childhood would defiantly not give Cindy the predisposition to have these values, however, her flushed situation in which she was later adopted by a loving and providing family would be able to give her the other needs she craves to reach self-actualization.

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