Dementia Care

“Smile. Touch. A gentle voice. Beauty. Yes, they can have quality of life. Who are we to assume they can’t?”

It’s not easy to understand what “quality of life” can really mean for someone who can’t communicate with you the way you’re used to. But when you focus on the disabilities that Alzheimer’s and dementia can cause, you risk missing the abilities that remain. In “My Mother, and Other Dementia Patients, Could Still Enjoy Quality of Life,” columnist Mark McCarter writes about his mother’s struggles with dementia, his own blindness to this special reality, and what he learned.

Read more: Don’t Let Alzheimer’s Steal Quality of Life…

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Mother’s Day sees many different traditions from family to family, from breakfast in bed and homemade cards to theater tickets and scrumptious dinners. But how do you still enjoy this day when your mom has Alzheimer’s or a related dementia?

Read more: Making the Most of Mother’s Day Memories…

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“He looks at me and asks who I am. When I mention my name his face lights up and he says ‘of course it is!’ It may be brief but it is so uplifting.

Read more: When Your Parent Doesn’t Recognize You Anymore…

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With the number of veterans needing long-term care in dementia units rising, it’s often a race between staff understanding the disease and the sheer amount of persons needing that understanding.

Amie Domey understands all too well. In her four years as a certified therapeutic-recreation specialist at the Wilkes-Barre VA Medical Center in Wilkes-Barre, PA, she’s noticed patterns in the behavior of the patients—patterns that are often misinterpreted. “Some might categorize wandering, aggression, agitation and hoarding as negative behaviors, but they are normal for those with dementia . . . staff need to understand what dementia is and how to deal with patients who have it, so that we can give our veterans the best care possible for the time they are living with us.”

Read more: Medical Center Focuses on Abilities, Not Deficits, of Persons With Dementia…

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A new test designed to diagnose Alzheimer’s disease was recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The test, which measures a protein in the brain that is indicative of the disease, could allow for earlier diagnosis, an important factor in Alzheimer’s treatment and research.

Read more: Can a Scan Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease?…

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At 44, nurse Doreen Watson-Beard had no idea that her increasing forgetfulness was a sign of something more serious.

“I thought if I ignored it long enough, it would go away,” she said in an article titled “Dementia’s Younger Victims.”

Read more: When Dementia Strikes Young…

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The American Association of Nurse Assessment Coordination (AANAC), a nonprofit association that supports long-term care professionals who provide quality care for nursing home residents, recently published Kim Warchol’s “Facilitate Successful Outcomes by Addressing Undetected or Unmanaged Dementia, Delirium, and Depression.”

Read more: AANAC Publishes Article by Dementia Care Specialists President…

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