Dementia Memory Direct Care Training
Although dementia is a medical condition, understanding its language is an activity of heart and feeling. And we never give really good care to people with dementia unless we can stand side by side with them.
Too bad, then, that the usual care stance is oppositional. We are usually too ready to symptomize and negatively label those with dementia. And we are hardly aware that we have done that.
Not surprising. That is exactly how our society regards those with dementia. From the doctor to the daughter, all too eager to hide behind symptom labels. Much more useful to understand how dementia changes a person. Then to make relationship with this person who has been changed.
Many of our problems in caring for those with dementia come about because we are trying to change them. Instead, we should be learning how to relate to each one in their illness.
We can name the signs of dementia, but so what? I have never found in 20 years of caring for people with dementia that their symptoms were the issue. The issue is the caregiver and the making of relationship.
Keys to Dementia Relationship:
1. Assume this person is full of fear and anxiety;
2. Therefore, always speak kindly, slowly while making eye and same level contact;
3. Learn the common problems in dementia thinking;
4. Accept those and work with them, not against the person;
5.Built trust through kindness;
6. Accept that each person does dementia in his own way, while sharing common problems.
From the beginning, see how dementia puts roadblocks in this person's life. Notice you could walk round those roadblocks to meet this lost and lonely person.
Common Problems in Dementia Thinking:
1. The fragmenting of short-term memory;
2. Being unable to follow logical argument;
3. Being unable to follow rational explanations;
4. Having no choice in any of this;
5. Creating stories to fill memory gaps;
6. Losing the sense of family connection.
You'd think, since we caregivers usually know all this, we'd make allowance for it all. But we don't. Sometimes it's because we really don't truly understand how these losses show up in daily life. Then, if we don't really understand what people are going through, we may blame them.
Sometimes, it's because we are stressed, tired and overworked. Then it's really easy to blame the person with dementia for being difficult, when we are actually at fault for not being easier. It helps a lot to know how dementia affects a person. Then we have to understand and forgive the ways in which those effects make our care life harder.
No-one gets dementia to make our lives difficult. After all, it also stole away that person's life and that person really is trapped. We still have choices.
So we need to understand how dementia works. We have to learn the ways it steals a life away from the person, leaving them alone on Planet Sadness.
And, if you're ever in that bad mood -- not that you ever would be -- then it's very important to get it that you have choices. They don't. And, heaven help them, they are in your power.
So, let's fill our care with kindness. And keep taking those vitamins.
Questions and Answers
Article Tags:
dementia
,alzheimers
,symptoms of dementia
,care staff
,direct care staff
,memory care
Senior Health Care, Assisted Living Services, Residential Care Homes with expert Caregivers by Always Best Care
iNancy answers the question "When your loved one has just been admitted to a Long Term Care Facility, now what?" Given here are practical suggestions and insights into the post admission adjustment process. How this change will impact your loved one, what to watch for and what you can do to ease their transition. Also, how to address the changes in your own role and know what your your on-going responsibilities will be...
The purpose of this position paper is to outline the legal, ethical, religious, and philosophical ramifications involved in Physician Assisted Suicide (PAS) and how affects of such decisions effect those connected to this issue.
A fast way to get gout relief is with baking soda which I've found it to be very effective. But now that I have gotten my uric acid levels under control I don't need to use this home remedy anymore.
Gout was once the 'disease of kings' due to their diet, but not any more. Anybody can have gout nowadays. Easy access to relatively cheap, mass-produced food and alcohol has meant that we are all at the mercy of gout through our diet.
Protruded discs are a major orthopedical challenge these days, as the cases of spondilitis and other chronic skeletal diseases increase in a daily basis. The orthopedic in NJ have found many solutions to this problem while working in the Center for pain management in New Jersey. The following is an insight to their unique treatment processes.
We need to keep our omega 6 foods at a minimum and include more omega 3 into our diets. Adding food items such as walnuts, chia seeds, to our salads is a simple and natural way to get our omega.
Most children demonstrate some impulsive/hyperactive behavior or have difficulty remaining on-task. Although typically found in boys, in 3-7% percent of children the inattentive, hyperactive, and/or impulsive behavior is recognized by clinician as being a significant problem that is not typical of normal development.
