Dealing With The Demands Of Dementia
Dealing With The Demands Of Dementia
By Jan Howard
A positive, common sense approach is needed when caring for people with dementia. Flexibility and creativity may be necessary in solving problems, such as wandering, paranoia, and inability to perform basic tasks.
Sharon Linet, RN, director of patient care services at Ashlar of Newtown, spoke about âCommon Sense approaches to Caring for People with Dementiaâ at a Lunch and Learn program November 13 sponsored by The Learning Center at Ashlar for mature adults.
Dementia is the loss of intellectual abilities, such as thinking, remembering, and reasoning. The loss is of sufficient severity to interfere with a personâs daily functioning. It is not a disease in itself, but rather a group of symptoms that may accompany certain diseases or physical conditions.
The most prevalent form of dementia is Alzheimerâs disease. âIt causes progressive losses,â Ms Linet said. âItâs a real tragic disease.â Dementia can also occur as the result of little strokes, brain injuries, Parkinsonâs Disease, Huntingtonâs Disease, and Pickâs Disease, among others. It can cause judgment problems.
âThe person may be physically able to do something but their brain doesnât tell them how to do it,â she said. There is a loss of short-term, long-term, and stored memory.
A person with dementia may not be able to do sequence tasks because of brain damage, she said. They may have difficulty with language and recognizing familiar objects or people.
âYouâre trying to help them, but they canât perceive who you are.
 âItâs difficult to deal with. When the brain deteriorates, it can cause psychosis, disturbances that cause the person to be out of touch with reality, and hallucinations,â Ms Linet said.
The personâs brain cannot interpret information, she said, and can lead to paranoia. Paranoia can lead them to feeling things are being taken from them.
âThey are out of touch with reality and their senses. They see and hear things that arenât there. They are not only having difficulty with their thoughts, but also with what they are seeing and hearing. Some people have distressful delusions.â
Depression is very common, Ms Linet said. âIt is a very real problem that has chemical causes. There are physical reasons for it. It needs to be treated with a little medicine, and a lot of intervention goes a long way. There is nothing wrong with calling the doctor. â
The person may become more agitated and anxious late in the day, which is referred to as sundowning, she said. While there is no definitive answer for its cause, sundowning may be the result of a change in environment or routine or fatigue. It may also be the result of medications taken in the morning that peak in the afternoon. âTheir energy level is high, and it is hard to keep focused.â
 There are stages of dementia, she explained. In the first stages, people are functioning. They are not aware of it as yet. Then the person becomes aware of pieces of time that are lost and begins to be concerned.
People with dementia are frustrated, âwith good reason,â Ms Linet said. They and their relatives may be in denial.
âThe first stage of grieving is denial. They may act out, get angry.â She explained that the impulse control center in the frontal lobe of the brain is what tells a person not to do that. In dementia, the frontal lobe is affected, and that is why people yell or hit.
âDonât take it personally,â Ms Linet said. The person is not acting this way on purpose, and it may be the result of just a little bit of stimulus they cannot handle.
Dementia can cause various other behavioral changes, such as wandering. Use flexibility and creativity, she said. âIf they wander out a door, paint the door to look like a bookcase. Disguise the door. They wonât walk through a bookcase.
âIf they are pacing, donât try to stop them. You may have behavioral things happen if you try to stop them.â Instead, she said, âGive them something to do, such as dusting. Look at their former interests.â
Homemakers could be given laundry to fold or leaf raking to take the place of pacing or wandering. Provide a way for them to spend their energy, she said. âTake them for a walk. The worse thing they can do is to sit in front of the TV.â
Ms Linet said the person should be kept busy to retain skills. âThe longer a skill is in place, the longer it will last.â
Scared And Alone
She said some people with dementia might look for their mother or want to go home.
âThey are not looking for their mother or house. What theyâre saying is âIâm scared, Iâm alone.â They need to feel connected. Stop telling them they live here. Give them the opportunity to talk about their mother. Get into their reality. Donât tell them their mother is dead. Thatâs the worse thing to do. Theyâll cry.
âGet them talking, reminiscing. Allow time to talk with them,â she said. âItâs useful time. It thwarts the frustration.â
Their inability to comprehend the ages of their children or who people are can be very heartbreaking for family members, Ms Linet said. âPeople want their parent to recognize them. Donât quiz them, saying âWho am I?â Thatâs very bad to do.â She suggested saying hi, giving your name, and relationship to them. âFeeding them information is okay.â
The first thing people with dementia lose is the ability to managing their finances, she said. Doing a checkbook becomes a complex task.
The person may begin hoarding things. âIt is the personâs mechanism to meet their own emotional and social needs. It should be allowed as long as itâs safe and not causing danger,â she noted.
A spouse or caregiver can get frustrated if the person is always rummaging or doing repetitive things, especially if they like things neat. âSpouses need to let go of some things. If they are rummaging, let them do it. When theyâre doing what they do, if someone interferes, no wonder theyâre swinging.â
If something is misplaced, and they think itâs been stolen, first validate their feelings, Ms Linet said. âSay âYou must be angryâ or âLetâs look for it.â Validation defuses anger. You can help calm them down by helping them.â
Once the person is calm, redirect them, she said. âGive them something else to do, a more pleasant focus.â
Arguing and reasoning never work, Ms Linet said. âItâs cruel and unusual punishment. The more you argue with them, they will scream at you. It doesnât work. Donât argue. Step into their world.â
Insisting on their completing a task that their brain will not allow them to do does not work, she said. âCelebrate what they can do.â
Do not ignore undesirable behavior, she said. Address the behavior with positive intervention or it will escalate. âDo not scold or punish. They are not children; these are people whoâve seen things that weâll never see. Whatâs happening to them is tragic. They should not be treated this way.â
One Step Commands
To help them do a sequence of tasks, use simple, one-step commands. âWhen you give instruction, give them time to process it. Use the same word in repetition of the command,â she said.
âWord directions positively. âDonâtâ commands are more difficult to understand. Instead of âDonât goâ say âPlease stay with me.â Tell people what they should do, not what they shouldnât do.â
 Make eye contact with the person and be positive, Ms Linet said. Sit or kneel to be on the same level as the person. âPeople with dementia need to feel in control,â she said.
Do not take them out of their element. Limit distractions and keep their environment simple. Use contrasting colors. Do not ask the person to find a white blouse or shirt on a white sheet. They cannot do it, she said.
To help avoid sundowning, keep the environment light so they can perceive their environment, Ms Linet said. Since older people do not need as much sleep, consider a nap period in the afternoon and a later bedtime. Work with the physician about spacing medications so they do not all peak in the afternoon.
Ms Linet advised caregivers to first take care of themselves. âIf you donât, you will have two people that are stressed out, you and the person you love.â
 It is a taxing job to care for a person with dementia, Ms Linet said. âDo something for yourself. Donât wallow in your own sadness. You need to be in the right frame of mind.ââ
She said it is normal to have guilt feelings about placing a family member in a nursing home. She noted, however, that when a family member is also the caregiver what is sacrificed in the relationship is the family member.
âLet us take over the care giving,â she said. âYou can be more effective as a loved one than as a caregiver. Sometimes you canât keep the person at home. It is more important to be a good family member. Donât let guilt destroy you. Donât let it be the love that goes. Would they want you to be doing this? Would they want you to feel this way?â
For information about future Lunch and Learn programs, contact Hilda DeLucia, community resources manager of Ashlar of Newtown, at 364-3127.