ABSTRACT

Understanding socially disruptive behavior in dementia is never easy. Most explanations offer neither solace nor solutions for families and carers, and treatment is often characterized by policies of control and containment. The result of Graham Stokes' 15 years of clinical work with people who are challenging, this book: disputes the traditional medical model of dementia and asserts that if we reach behind the barrier of cognitive devastation and decipher the cryptic messages, it can be shown that much behavior is not meaningless but meaningful. It contrasts the medical interpretation that sees anti-social behavior as mere symptoms of disease with a person-centered interpretation that resonates change and resolution. It offers a radical and innovative interpretation of challenging behavior consistent with the new culture of dementia care, focusing on needs to be met rather than problems to be managed.

chapter 1|15 pages

Dementia: No Longer a 'Silent Epidemic'

chapter 2|20 pages

Assessment of Behaviour in Dementia

chapter 3|8 pages

The 'Medical Disease' Model of Dementia

chapter 4|31 pages

A Person with Dementia

chapter 5|27 pages

The Environmental Context of Dementia

chapter 6|13 pages

The Needs of People with Dementia

chapter 7|27 pages

Taxonomies of Possible Explanations

chapter 9|15 pages

Resolution Therapy

chapter 11|20 pages

Working with Unmet Need

chapter 12|11 pages

The Challenge of Confusion