ABSTRACT

Care-giving in dementia is a new speciality with its own rapidly growing body of knowledge. This second volume of contributions from leading practitioners and researchers around the world is a handbook for all those involved in 'hands on' caring, or in planning care, for persons with dementia. Volume 2 of Care-Giving in Dementia provides a rich source of information on most recent thinking about individualized long-term care of both dementia sufferers and their families.
Key themes in Volume 2 are:
* the subjective experience of dementia
* the provision of care for family carers
* differing cultural perspectives of dementia
* the crucial importance of life-history information for understanding a person's reaction to their illness.
Chapters on the search for an ethical framework and the best environment within which to provide care are particularly timely.

part I|79 pages

Models and theories

part II|68 pages

Interventions in care facilities

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

Practical management of frontal lobe dementia

Institutional perspectives

chapter Chapter 8|8 pages

‘Snoezelen’

A new way of communicating with the severely demented elderly

chapter Chapter 9|22 pages

Psychosocial treatment for demented

Overview of methods and effects

part III|40 pages

Interventions in the community

chapter Chapter 10|17 pages

The homeostasis model and dementia

A new perspective on care-giving

chapter Chapter 11|10 pages

Supporting informal care-givers of demented elderly people

Psychosocial interventions and their outcomes

part V|68 pages

Environment, education and ethics

chapter Chapter 18|15 pages

In search of the best environment

Results of five experiments in the institutional organization of care for demented people