Gwendolyn de Geest, RN, BSN, MA Managing Responsive Behaviors In Care
Alterations in Cognition Delirium Dementia Depression
Maria Martin, VCC BSN student, 2011
Delirium Acute Reversible Physiological, psychosocial, environmental factors
Dementia Chronic, progressive Symptoms - loss of memory - poor judgment - mood swings - disorientation
Alzheimer’s Disease Dr. Alois Alzheimer 1906 – Auguste D. Frankfurt, Germany Plaques and Tangles
Aaron Copland 90 yrs Rita Hayworth 68 yrs Aaron Copland 90 yrs Sugar Ray Robinson 67 yrs Burgess Meredith 89 yrs Barry Goldwater 89 yrs E.B. White 86 yrs
Alzheimer Disease Normal Brain TIME July 17, 2000 Language Memory Language Memory
GREEN RED GREEN BLUE RED BLUE RED BLUE GREEN RED Attention / Frontal Lobe Skills
The Thief of Memory
The person remains The person’s humanity remains Communicates with feelings, not words Impact on Communication
Depression Chronic Reversible Often mistaken for dementia
Reason for every behavior Check out approach Apraxia, Agnosia, Aphasia Responsive Behaviors
Maria Martin, VCC BSN student, 2011
Apraxia Loss of ability to take purposeful action even when muscles, senses, and vocabulary seem intact.
Agnosia Inability to recognize objects by use of the senses.
Aphasia Inability to use or understand language (spoken or written). 1.expressive aphasia 2.receptive aphasia
Intervention Strategies (1) Calm approach Explore cause of behavior Understanding Education and support for family
Intervention Strategies (2) Apraxia - loss of independence Agnosia - environment Aphasia - frustration
Communication Strategies Reminiscence Simple repetition Appropriate touch Distraction - catastrophic reaction
Nursing Process Application Situation 86yr-old woman exhibits disturbed attention and confusion Nursing diagnosis ineffective coping related to organic memory loss
Nursing Process Application Nursing goal minimize factors that contribute to inattention Nursing approach supportive, calm
Nursing Process Application Nursing intervention Direct eye contact Use of appropriate touch Clear, simple direction Repeat messages slowly Modify environmental stimuli Assist family to understand
Evaluation of Successful Outcomes Does not occur through words Behavior Co-operation Positive response
References Arnold & Boggs, Interpersonal Relationships De Geest, G., Living Dementia Case-Study Approach Potter & Perry, Canadian Fundamentals of Nursing