Fulfilled living in later life
The best Christmas gift for people with dementia is your visit

Thursday 7th November 2019

The best Christmas gift for people with dementia is your visit

Louise Morse introduces Visiting a Person with Dementia, a booklet revised for 2019 offering support and practical advice for visiting those you love who have dementia this Christmas.

Families and relatives will be coming together for Christmas, and churches will be increasing their visits to people in care homes. People often shy away from visiting people with dementia because the normal ground rules don’t apply, and they don’t know how to communicate effectively. Yet, as they visit, they bring an invisible gift that can be life-changing.

“What’s the point in visiting her, now she doesn’t remember who I am?” a daughter was asked by her mother’s friend. Heather says one of the most hurtful things about caring for her mother with dementia was seeing how her friends dropped away, one by one. “They didn’t see how much their visits meant to her,” Heather recalled sadly. They may not have realised it, but when they visited they were helping her mother retain her sense of identity, even though she’d forgotten theirs.

“Holding the person together is the main aim of good dementia care,” said Professor Tom Kitwood of Bradford University, the trailblazer in understanding dementia wrote in his book Dementia Reconsidered. “Identity remains when others help to hold it in place.”

Many of us will visit relatives and older friends with dementia over the Christmas season. Tips for visiting and communicating well with those with dementia are given in Visiting a Person with Dementia, a short book which has been revised for Christmas 2019.

With contributions from Dr Jennifer Bute, a psychogeriatric nurse, Janet Jacob, and author and cognitive behavioural therapist Louise Morse, Visiting a Person with Dementia is designed to help friends and family spend happy and positive time with their loved ones.

Advice ranges from the practical to the spiritual. For example, you should approach people with dementia from the front, smiling widely as though seeing them has made your day. Never tap a person with dementia on the shoulder from the back which could startle them and cause a violent reaction.

Sit so you are at eye level, and slightly to one side so you aren’t overpowering. Know as much as you can about the person before you visit so you can choose topics to talk about that are relevant to them. Be prepared to sit quietly, but also be comfortable gently ‘burbling’ about different things until the person responds to something that catches their attention.

Author Christine Bryden, after being diagnosed with Young Onset Dementia at the age of 46, realised the importance of personal connections and visiting. In a talk at an international conference she appealed:

If I enjoy your visit, why must I remember it? Why must I remember who you are? Is this just to satisfy your OWN need for identity?

So please allow Christ to work through you. Let me live in the present. If I forget a pleasant memory, it does not mean that it was not important for me.”

Relatives and friends often shy away from visiting people with dementia because the normal ground rules don’t apply, and they don’t know how to communicate effectively. Yet like most things, it’s not difficult when you know how.

One of our volunteer’s most effective visits was simply supporting a resident’s hand as she quoted familiar scripture verses to her, smiling and keeping eye contact. Vera had lost the ability to speak but her face was aglow as the Holy Spirit ministered to her. Spiritual support is key for Christians with dementia, and it’s good to know that ‘deep calls to deep’ (Psalm 42:7).

If you’ll be spending time with a loved one this Christmas who is affected by dementia, order a copy of Visiting a Person with Dementia for just £3.