Living with Dementia

To change your minds about people whose minds have changed

In the first of three parts, Dr. Power makes the case for a paradigm shift needed in the established model of institutional long-term care. Viewers see documented evidence of the negative outcomes that result from traditional care, including the dangerous practice of “medicating away” the predictably negative reactions that emerge in response to standard care practices and attitudes. In describing a new vision of care, Dr. Power describes how to

  • Redefine the disease to better understand those experiencing it
  • Stop making people with dementia look and act like we do
  • Recast “problem behaviors” as mechanisms for coping and communicating
  • Find new ways to make normal life experiences accessible to people with dementia
  • Create more opportunities for people to feel connected and find meaning day to day
  • Decrease suffering and increase satisfaction using a new "experiential" model of dementia care

In part two, Dr. Taylor, a former psychologist and educator, articulates the needs, fears, and all-too-common negative experiences of a person diagnosed with dementia. He speaks from the heart on behalf of all those who are unable to communicate for themselves and, at the same time, speaks as one unique individual asking to be respected, supported and, most of all, seen and heard. With surprising candor and wit, he presents moving personal stories and sage advice that provide new insight about the experience of the disease to formal and informal caregivers as well as LTC managers and administrators.

Together, in part three, these two inspiring speakers respond to common questions and concerns, including

  • How to communicate a person’s preferences to care staff
  • Whether asking for opinions and responses from people with dementia is confusing for them
  • Ways to have better long-distance interchanges with a loved one by phone
  • Whether better care practices can be taught or are essentially innate. And much more...

This valuable training tool helps to raise the awareness of anyone working in long-term care settings to the remaining potential for people with dementia to lead satisfying and fulfilling lives — with appropriate supports — despite their losses.

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Blue Flower

Judy Berry

Winner - Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Community Health Leaders Award