NON-FICTION ROTATING SAMPLER

Tips for Visiting a Loved One with Alzheimer's
By Debra L. Stang

 

Joe (names changed to protect privacy) had been a very attentive caregiver to his wife, Martha, who suffered from Alzheimer’s. He struggled for a long time with the idea of placing her in a nursing facility. Therefore, when he finally did bring her to our facility, we were all a little surprised when he never came to visit.

The nurses reported that when he did stop by, it was only a matter of moments before he left in tears. When contacted, Joe explained he had no idea how to interact with Martha in the nursing home. She didn’t talk much, and didn’t seem to remember him. All he could do was hold her hand for a few moments before he was forced to escape.

Joe’s problem is not an uncommon one. Chances are, if you have a loved one with Alzheimer’s, you, too, have struggled with how to spend your visits. These simple suggestions may help.

  1. Time your visit to coincide with a meal or an activity. This will give you something to do with your loved one. Joe started coming around the lunch hour when he could feed Martha. He was proud that she ate more for him than for anyone else. Another family I worked with started taking their loved one to our weekly choir practice.
  1. Bring pictures or letters. Bring some of your loved one’s favorite pictures or letters received long ago and talk to him or her about them. Your loved one’s memory is often better for distant events (things that happened years ago) than for things that happened today or yesterday. Share some family stories and see if you can spark your loved one’s memory.
  1. Play music, or sing your loved one’s favorite songs. One woman I worked with came alive whenever her husband put on her favorite Elvis CD. A man who had played the organ for his church loved being allowed to play his favorite songs on the facility’s piano.
  1. Bring a Bible or another favorite book of your loved one’s. Read her favorite verses, or perhaps a few lines of poetry or a few chapters of a much-loved novel.
  1. Bring an activity. Perhaps you could paint your loved one’s nails, or fold clothes together. Even though Martha’s memory was poor, she could still play a mean game of gin rummy. Another client spent hours with her spouse stacking dominoes in patterns that made sense only to her.

 

Visiting a loved one with dementia can be a challenge. It’s so easy to see the changes and focus on the things your loved one will never do again. But the truth is, there are still many things your loved one can still enjoy. With a little planning, your visits can be times of joy rather than of sorrow.

 

leaping Debra



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1513     © Debra L. Stang     Thursday February 28 2008