Minimizing Grief for a Surviving Spouse with Dementia

Photo credit Cristian Newman My struggle with this dilemma began when my father started receiving hospice care. At this point in my caregiving journey, both my parents had dementia and shared a room in a nursing home. For many years, they had lived in their own private rooms on the same floor, but the end was near for both of them. We felt they needed to be together during this time, and their money was nearly gone from the expense of two nursing home rooms. At first, I did not want Mom to know that Dad was going on hospice care since I knew she’d immediately think “death.” This correlation is what most people focus on, even though hospice services are a blessing for ailing loved ones and their families. However, I knew this news would be traumatic for Mom, who was already suffering from a great deal of physical pain and the effects of dementia. I wanted to spare her even more anguish. Continue reading on Agingcare to learn more about some ways to approach an older adult with dementia after their spouse or other loved one has died: Minding Our Elders: Caregivers Share Their Personal Stories. “I hold onto your book as a life preserver and am reading it slowly on purpose...I don't want it to end.” ...Craig William Dayton, Film Composer For overnight or long-term protection try Egosan’s new X-Dry. X-Dry offers most people 8 hours of protection. Request a free sample from Egosancares.com Need incontinence support for yourself or someone else? Try Egosan’...
Source: Minding Our Elders - Category: Geriatrics Authors: Source Type: blogs