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Wellbeing
The Role of Individuals and Others in Monitoring, Assessing, and Promoting Wellbeing
Own Role in Monitoring Individuals’ Wellbeing
As a registered manager to be, my role in monitoring wellbeing is strategic, operational and cultural. I hold overall accountability for ensuring that systems are in place to consistently observe changes in individuals’ physical, emotional and social wellbeing. This includes establishing robust care planning systems, ensuring accurate daily records, and using supervision and audits to monitor whether wellbeing indicators are being identified and acted upon appropriately. Monitoring is not limited to physical health observations but extends to dignity, emotional resilience, relationships and independence, in line with the Care Act 2014 definition of wellbeing (Department of Health and Social Care, 2014).
Critically, my leadership role influences how effectively monitoring occurs. Where expectations are clear and staff feel confident to escalate concerns, early signs of deterioration are more likely to be identified. Conversely, weak leadership or unclear accountability can result in fragmented monitoring and delayed responses, negatively affecting outcomes.
Role of Others in Monitoring Wellbeing
Frontline care staff play a central role in monitoring wellbeing due to their daily contact with individuals. Their observations of mood, appetite, mobility or engagement provide essential qualitative information that informs decision-making. Senior carers and team leaders act as a bridge between frontline staff and management, ensuring that concerns are escalated appropriately and documented accurately. External professionals, such as district nurses or GPs, also contribute to monitoring through clinical reviews and health assessments, particularly where complex or long-term conditions are present (SCIE, 2023).
Own Role in Assessing Individuals’ Wellbeing
Assessment is a more formal process requiring professional judgement and compliance with statutory frameworks. My role involves overseeing holistic assessments and ensuring they reflect the individual’s needs, wishes and outcomes, rather than organisational convenience. Under the Care Act 2014, assessments must consider physical and mental health, control over daily life, social participation and personal dignity (Department of Health and Social Care, 2014). I am responsible for ensuring assessments are reviewed regularly and updated in response to change.
Analytically, my role requires balancing risk management with enablement. Overly risk-averse assessments can restrict independence, whereas poorly managed risk can compromise safety. Effective assessment therefore depends on reflective leadership, evidence-based decision-making and multi-disciplinary input.
Role of Others in Assessing Wellbeing
Social workers, healthcare professionals and allied health practitioners contribute specialist expertise to assessments, particularly in areas such as mental capacity, mobility or clinical risk. Care staff provide valuable insight into how assessed needs translate into daily practice. Individuals themselves are central to the assessment process; without their involvement, assessments risk being inaccurate or disempowering. Skills for Care (2023) emphasizes that co-produced assessments lead to more meaningful outcomes and improved wellbeing.
Own Role in Promoting Individuals’ Wellbeing
Promoting wellbeing is embedded in my responsibility to shape a positive, person-centred culture. This includes ensuring staff are trained to understand wellbeing holistically, allocating resources to meaningful activities, and creating an environment that supports dignity, choice and inclusion. Leadership decisions regarding staffing levels, training priorities and partnership working directly affect the extent to which wellbeing is actively promoted rather than passively maintained.
Promotion of wellbeing also involves preventative approaches, such as encouraging social participation and supporting independence, which reduce the likelihood of decline and reliance on acute services (SCIE, 2023).
Role of Others in Promoting Wellbeing
Care staff promote wellbeing through everyday interactions, respectful communication and enabling choice. Activity coordinators, advocates and community partners support social inclusion and emotional wellbeing. Families and informal carers also play a significant role, providing continuity, emotional support and identity reinforcement. Where collaboration is effective, wellbeing promotion is sustained; where roles are fragmented, outcomes are weakened.
Reflection
Reflecting on this analysis has reinforced the extent to which my role as a registered manager shapes not only systems but behaviors and culture. I recognized that monitoring, assessing and promoting wellbeing are interconnected processes requiring consistent leadership oversight rather than isolated tasks.
This reflection highlighted that while frontline staff are essential to day-to-day wellbeing, their effectiveness is strongly influenced by the clarity of my expectations and the support structures I provide. I also became more aware of the tension between risk management and wellbeing promotion, particularly in assessment processes.
Going forward, I would place greater emphasis on reflective supervision and multi-disciplinary collaboration to strengthen shared understanding of wellbeing. Overall, this task has deepened my appreciation of how leadership practice directly influences the quality and sustainability of wellbeing outcomes in adult care.
References
Department of Health and Social Care (2014) Care Act 2014. London: The Stationery Office.
Skills for Care (2023) Promoting wellbeing in adult social care. Available at: https://www.skillsforcare.org.uk (Accessed: 4 January 2026).
Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE) (2023) How is wellbeing understood under the Care Act? Available at: https://www.scie.org.uk/care-act-2014/assessment-and-eligibility/eligibility/wellbeing (Accessed: 4 January 2026).

