This chapter considers communication with people with dementia while recognizing the growing recognition of the need to include people in their own care and treatment. Dementia affects a person's ability to communicate and their comprehension of the world around them; however, the success or failure to communicate is related to a whole range of factors not least of which is the other person(s) involved in the communication. Current understandings of dementia reflect a condition that is as much to do with an individual's environment, both social and physical, as it is to do with specific neurological damage. This chapter reflects on the various challenges and facilitators to communicating with people with dementia, breaking down the impact of different factors within the personal, social and physical environment of the person with dementia. By thinking about dementia in a more holistic manner, we can then find ways to compensate for impairment, address challenges and improve communication. The chapter finishes with a discussion about diagnosis and the disclosure of a dementia diagnosis to the person and their family, perhaps one of the most important times for effective communication with a person with dementia. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
CITATION STYLE
McCabe, L. (2016). Communication with People with Dementia. In Mental Health and Older People (pp. 293–300). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-29492-6_25
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