1 / 15

Dementia Care & Support for People with Intellectual Disability Rachel Carling-Jenkins, PhD

Dementia Care & Support for People with Intellectual Disability Rachel Carling-Jenkins, PhD ACU / NDS Website Publication Part 4: How to create a dementia friendly environment. Content within this presentation is based on research and study funded by: Acknowledgement to my colleagues:

joshua
Download Presentation

Dementia Care & Support for People with Intellectual Disability Rachel Carling-Jenkins, PhD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dementia Care & Support for People with Intellectual DisabilityRachel Carling-Jenkins, PhD ACU / NDS Website Publication Part 4: How to create a dementia friendly environment

  2. Content within this presentation is based on research and study funded by: Acknowledgement to my colleagues: Professor Teresa Iacono; Professor Chris Bigby from LaTrobe University Dr Jenny Torrfrom CDDHV, Monash University

  3. What does a dementia friendly environment look like?

  4. There are many things we can do within the home to assist people with dementia to make sense of their environment. 5 Key Elements: • Calm 2. Predictable 3. Easy to interpret 4. Homely 5. Safe

  5. 1. Calm Calm Vs. Noisy & or cluttered

  6. Calm: The role of staff • Remain calm • Keep voices low and even toned • De-clutter benches • Do not show stress or frustration • Don’t rush through activities • Walk rather than run

  7. 2. Predictable Know what to expect Vs Mixed messages TIME FOR BED

  8. Predictable: The role of staff • Pay attention to your body language, and the way you dress • Put the food on the table before calling someone to the dinner table

  9. 3. Easy to Interpret Understandable Vs Confusing

  10. Think about… • How to find the toilet without verbal prompt • How to find your bedroom by yourself • What clues are needed to show people what a room’s purpose is: such as the kitchen • Removing mirrors • The use of primary colours

  11. 4. Homely Homelike Vs Workplace / clinical

  12. 5. Safe Safe Vs. Unsafe

  13. A few pointers… Outside the home: • No corners in paths outside • Ramps • Consistent colour patterns Inside the home: • Handles on cupboards • Consistent flooring • Primary colours to contrast doors

  14. Reference: Dementia and People with Learning Disabilities Guidance on the assessment, diagnosis, treatment and support of people with learning disabilities who develop dementia http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/files/pdfversion/cr155.pdf

  15. Please contact me directly for a confidential discussion on: • Consultation within your workplace • Staff training sessions • Family training sessions Dr Rachel Carling-Jenkins Research Fellow R.carling-jenkins@latrobe.edu.au rcarlingjenkins@gmail.com Phone; 0405 387 075

More Related