Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

What is Momentia?

What is Momentia?

What is momentia?

Momentia is a joyful proclamation. Momentia declares the new dementia story, a story not of fear, isolation, despair, futility and loss, but a story of hope, connection, growth, purpose and courage.

Momentia affirms a story told by the lips and lives of people living with dementia, a story of living fully and boldly in the moment.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Google Search - Dementia and wanting to go home

A reader searched Google using these keywords

dementia and wanting to go home.

Home Sweet Home

The following article headline was featured in the number one position on the search page,

Dementia Patients Want to Go Home, or Do They?


My mother repeatedly said she wanted to move back home to a place where she had not lived for over 60 years (South Philadelphia).

To learn more about Alzheimers and Dementia care visit the Alzheimer's Reading Room Intelligent Knowledge Base

Friday, April 25, 2014

VA Caregiver Support

Did you know that the VA has services designed to support you in your role as a Family Caregiver?

Always, Seek, Knoqwledge



A reader searching Bing using the following keywords

does the va have a program for alzhiemers

was directed to this article in the Alzheimer's Reading Room.

VA’s Caregiver Support Program Expanding


Tuesday, April 22, 2014

The Basics of Dementia

Dementia is a an illness that usually occurs slowly over time, and usually includes a progressive state of deterioration. The earliest signs of dementia are usually memory problems, confusion, and changes in the way a person behaves and communicates.



Dementia is the loss of cognitive functioning, which means the loss of the ability to think, remember, or reason, as well as behavioral abilities, to such an extent that it interferes with a person’s daily life and activities.

Signs and symptoms of dementia occur when healthy neurons (nerve cells) in the brain stop working, lose connections with other brain cells, or die.

Everyone loses some neurons as they age, but people with dementia experience far greater loss in neurons and brain cells.

Scientists have some theories about mechanisms that may lead to different forms of dementias, but more research is needed to better understand if and how these mechanisms contribute to the development of dementia.

Dementia is more common with advanced age, as many as half of all people age 85 or older may have some type of dementia, it is not a normal part of aging.

Memory loss is not the only sign of dementia. For a person to be considered to have dementia, he or she must meet the following criteria:
  • Two or more core mental functions must be impaired. These functions include memory, language skills, visual perception, and the ability to focus and pay attention. These also include cognitive skills such as the ability to reason and solve problems.
  • The loss of brain function is severe enough that a person cannot do normal, everyday tasks.
Some people with dementia cannot control their emotions. Their personalities may change. They can have delusions, which are strong beliefs without proof, such as the idea that someone is stealing from them.

Source http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/dementias/detail_dementia.htm

Also see





Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Alzheimer Obsession with Time

A search of the following keywords - Alzheimer obsession with time - lead the reader to the following article.

Purple Tree
You are off to a good start by lowering her anxiety by the fake phone call.

Next, try to expand your creativity and redirect her thoughts away from the obsession.

You want to develop a series of very short explanations -- one or two sentences at most and appropriate to the what is going on at the time of her obsession. For example, if the time she’s remembering is school age children and it’s during the day, then of course they are in school and will be home soon.

If it is later in the day, perhaps they are at a friends houses playing; or, aunt Mary took them shopping for your Christmas present, birthday presents, school clothes, etc.

Whatever makes sense to her (a normal activity at that time).

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Merry Christmas to All

“When we recall Christmas past, we usually find that the simplest things - not the great occasions - give off the greatest glow of happiness.”
― Bob Hope

Merry Christmas


 To learn more about Alzheimers and Dementia care visit the Alzheimer's Reading Room Knowledge Base

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

HEALTH MINISTER RECOGNISES THE VITAL WORK OF CARERS AT DEMENTIA ACHIEVEMENTS CONFERENCE

Health Minister Edwin Poots today presented the awards at the Northern Ireland Dementia Achievements Conference at the Stormont Hotel in Belfast.
HEALTH MINISTER RECOGNISES THE VITAL WORK OF CARERS AT DEMENTIA ACHIEVEMENTS CONFERENCE

The awards are a celebration of innovation and good practice.

They are designed to recognise organisations and individuals who have worked to improve the quality of life of people with dementia.

The awards are run by the Dementia Services Development Centre.


Friday, October 25, 2013

Google Search - bexarotene targretin alzheimers

Three teams of highly respected Alzheimer’s researchers failed to replicate what appeared to be breakthrough results for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease using existing cancer drug Targretin® (brand name Bexarotene).

Google Search - bexarotene targretin alzheimers

Monday, October 21, 2013

Dementia For Schools

Creating a Dementia Friendly Generation


The young people of today are the employers, employees and carers of tomorrow. Six key reasons have been identified for educating young people about dementia:
  1. Young people want to know
  2. Increased exposure of young people to dementia
  3. Wrong exposure gives the wrong message
  4. Optimum learning – relevant to wide parts of the national curriculum, especially PHSE/ PSHEEC
  5. The right disorder for connecting first and last generations
  6. Public health and early opportunities for health education
To Learn More Go Here

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To learn more about Alzheimers and Dementia care visit the Alzheimer's Reading Room

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Learning How to Communicate with Someone Living with Dementia

One thing that drives dementia caregivers crazy is repetitive questions and repetitive behavior.



I know this from the number of emails I receive on this issue, and the number of comments we get on the issue.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Bing Search - types of dementia

Dementia is the gradual deterioration of mental functioning that effects memory, mood, thinking, concentration, and judgment.


Read

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Bing Search - alzheimers daily routine lists

After years of floundering around I finally concluded that the only way I was going to be able to accomplish my mission was to introduce a systematic routine to our daily activities. 


Read

Monday, April 9, 2012

Urinary Tract Infections Can Hasten Memory Loss in Alzheimer's Patients | Alzheimer's Reading Room

Researchers have found a link between common infections, such as a cold, stomach bug or urine infection and an increase in inflammation like reactions in the brain which lead to an increased rate of cognitive decline. Study results show that people who got an infection had twice the rate of cognitive decline as people without infections.

By Bob DeMarco
Alzheimer's Reading Room 

My name is Bob DeMarco, I am an Alzheimer's caregiver. My mother Dorothy, now 95 years old, suffers from Alzheimer's disease. 
This week my mother had her second urinary tract infection of the year. Urinary Tract infections are a problem faced by many Alzheimer's caregivers. 

Urinary tract infections are particularly worrisome to me and they should be to most Alzheimer's caregivers. 
There is research evidence indicating that infections can hasten memory loss in persons suffering from Alzheimer's. 

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Wheels of Life


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Popular articles on the Alzheimer's Reading Room


The Alzheimer's Action Plan: The Experts' Guide to the Best Diagnosis and Treatment for Memory Problems

Bob DeMarco is the editor of the Alzheimer's Reading Room and an Alzheimer's caregiver. The Alzheimer's Reading Room is the number one website on the Internet for news, advice, and insight into Alzheimer's disease. Bob has written more than 950 articles with more than 8,000 links on the Internet. Bob resides in Delray Beach, FL.
Original content Bob DeMarco, Alzheimer's Reading Room

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