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Managing Other Medical Conditions When the Person Has Dementia

Managing Other Medical Conditions When the Person Has Dementia. Learning How to Let Go Rather Than Give Up. Terms You Will NEED to Know. Advanced directives Living Will DNR orders Durable HC-POA Palliative care Hospice care Comfort care. Now for the GEMS…. Diamonds Emeralds

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Managing Other Medical Conditions When the Person Has Dementia

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  1. Managing Other Medical Conditions When the Person Has Dementia Learning How to Let Go Rather Than Give Up

  2. Terms You Will NEED to Know • Advanced directives • Living Will • DNR orders • Durable HC-POA • Palliative care • Hospice care • Comfort care

  3. Now for the GEMS… Diamonds Emeralds Ambers Rubies Pearls

  4. Diamonds Still Clear Sharp - Can Cut Hard - Rigid - Inflexible Many Facets Can Really Shine

  5. Diamonds • Know Who’s in Charge – Respect Authority • Can do OLD habits & routines • Become more territorial OR less aware of boundaries • Like the familiar – FIGHT CHANGE • Can pull it together to make you look bad • Know how to push your buttons • Want to keep roles the same • Tell the same stories ask the same ?s

  6. Emeralds Changing color Not as Clear or Sharp - Vague Good to Go – Need to ‘DO’ Flaws are Hidden Time Traveling

  7. Emeralds • Think they are FINE • Get emotional quickly • Make mistakes – don’t realize it • Do over and over OR Skip completely • Ask – “What? Where? When?” • Like choices • Get lost in past life, past places, past roles • Need help, DON’T know it or like it!

  8. Ambers Amber Alert Caution! Caught in a moment All about Sensation Explorers

  9. Ambers • Get into stuff • Fiddle, mess, touch, taste, dig, tear, fold….. • Move toward action and noise OR away • Sensory tolerance • Sensory need • Mouth, fingers, feet, genitalia • Can’t figure it out… react physically

  10. Rubies Hidden Depths Red Light on Fine Motor Comprehension & Speech Halt Coordination Falters Wake-Sleep Patterns are Gone

  11. Rubies • Fine motor stops • Hard to stop and hard to get going • Limited visual awareness • One direction – forward only • Can’t figure out details – but do copy us • SLOW to change • On the go or full stop • Use music and rhythm

  12. Pearls Hidden in a Shell Still & Quiet Easily Lost Beautiful - Layered Unable to Move – Hard to Connect Primitive Reflexes on the Outside

  13. Pearls • Can’t move • Not aware of the world around – most of the time • Problems swallowing • Hard to get connected • How we touch and help matters • SLOW!!!! • Varies a LOT

  14. Why is Dementia Different as the Journey Happens? • It typically takes a LONG TIME • The person will change, and change, and change, and change…. • You are losing the person, even as they remain • You are changing over the journey • How it WAS is NOT how it IS… • What should happen/work , DOESN”T…

  15. What are the Different Care Approaches to Consider? • Health Promotion • Curative • Restorative - Rehabilitative • Maintenance • Compensatory • Palliative

  16. Health Promotion • Check Ups • Annual vaccinations • Lower the numbers • Increase activity level • Eat well – moderately • Monitor all conditions for careful control • DO WHAT YOU SHOULD to be the BEST YOU CAN BE!

  17. Curative • Fix what is wrong • Test to figure out what is happening then DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT: • Surgery • Medications • Treatment • Full recovery of function – GOOD as NEW!

  18. Restorative • Recovery of SOME degree of function or ability • Focuses on the PERSON regaining skills and abilities with help • Rehab personnel • Special equipment • New techniques • Not perfect, but BACK to a Higher level of Function

  19. Maintenance • Maintaining the Status Quo – Keepin’ ON • Not losing ground • Depends on: • Physical environment not changing • Caregiver consistency • Sustained abilities of the person • All other things staying the same • It’s HARD WORK … SO… • ‘IS what I have worth keeping???’

  20. Compensatory • Providing what the person can’t do to ‘fill in the gaps so that LIFE GOES ON…. • Supportive • Physical environment changes • Caregiver cueing and helping changes • Expectations change • Schedules and routines change to accommodate • End Point is the Same – • How we get there Changes

  21. Palliative • Comfort Care • TOP PRIORITY – • Honor personal preferences and choices • Manage Pain, Distress, Anxiety, Fear, Discomfort • Identify & seek to meet social, physical, psychological, and spiritual needs • Let go of FIXING and MOVE ON to Comforting

  22. Acute Illness Versus Dementia • You can FIX IT! • IT gets better & goes away • It lasts only a SHORT time • Doctors KNOW what to do to make it better • The person goes back to how they were pre-illness • You can’t change it • It keeps getting WORSE No matter what you do! • It lasts a LONG time – YEARS • Doctors can offer only help – they can’t fix it • You can’t go home again – The person is NEVER the same

  23. Progression of Dementia • Early Loss – Habits and Routines • Moderate Loss - Just get it DONE! • Middle Loss – Hunting and Gathering • Sever Loss – Constant GO or Down & Out • Profound Loss – Stuck in Glue

  24. What Does this Look Like?

  25. Letting Go Versus Giving Up • When is it time? • How will you know? • What is enough? • Who should help decide? • How to balance OLD wishes/promises and the current realities • How can we make it happen? • What do we do instead?

  26. So When Should You Say WHEN! • Cost versus benefit • What is possible VERSUS what is PROBABLE • Best Case Outcome – Is it worth it? • Big Picture for the person • What did they tell you before? • Who are they… are they still able to be that person? • Is this about them or about you or about someone else???

  27. Signs that it may be time… • Repeated infections • Antibiotics seem ineffective • Refusals to eat – even favorite items • Holding food in mouth – spitting it out • Soft coughs – wet voice • Stop moving – curling up • Sleeping a lot • Lots of low grade fevers • Primitive reflexes show up • Withdrawal from those around – closing eyes • Drifting in and out • Says ‘good-bye’ • Talks about ‘going home’ • Asks permission to go • Albumin drops very low • Wounds won’t heal • Can’t keep weight on • Skin and bones • Moaning – not actively communicating

  28. What does this Mean? • Reduce or stop monitoring – if there is not a ‘treatment’ that will be pursued • Provide what the person wants or needs NOT what is ‘best’ for them • Provide comfort – • Assess for and manage pain, discomfort, or distress • Give permission to GO….

  29. What Does This Mean? • Don’t treat infections, IF… • Don’t force INTAKE • Don’t Push Fluids or Put in IVs • Don’t Force movement • Don’t Just ‘DO CARE’ – and leave alone • Don’t Force Interaction • Treat the discomfort of infections… • Offer tastes, textures • Offer fluids – decide about thickened… • Use touch, massage, controlled repositioning • Be present, balance offerings of silence & space with communication & contact

  30. How Can We Get This to Happen? • Plan ahead • Talk A LOT • Get HC-POA • Get educated • Get support – all on one page • Keep checking in • Re-evaluate • Ask questions THEN Listen, then think, then act

  31. Questions????

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