What a Patient With Dementia Experiences

John Gotelli, MSN, GNP, a Geriatrics-trained Nurse Practitioner at Hillsborough says, “Somebody with dementia lacks the ability to process information that you and I take for granted. If a foodservice person delivers a tray of food, you or I (if we were in the hospital), would understand that interaction. Yet someone with dementia may think that that person is trying to poison them.”
With dementia, a primary impact is often use of language and verbal ability. So, patients struggle both to understand information they receive and to express their wishes and needs. For example, a dementia patient who is fearful, confused, or in pain may not be able to describe what they’re experiencing. They may not understand why they are at the hospital or how they got there. Or they don’t understand the motives are of the people who keep entering their room.
鈥淚magine if you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on. You鈥檙e in this place, it鈥檚 very bright or it鈥檚 dark, you鈥檙e connected to wires, people are doing things to you鈥ith a dementia patient their go-to is often to lash out and tell people to 鈥榣eave me alone, stop bothering me.鈥欌 Krista Wells, MSN, RN, CCRN, Hillsborough Hospital鈥檚 Clinical Nurse Education Specialist
Stopping behaviors versus understanding the dementia patient
Without awareness of what the dementia patient actually experiences, staff focus first on stopping behaviors. Instead, staff should focus on understanding what’s creating problems from the patient’s perspective. Too often, if difficult and unsafe behaviors (including striking out, pulling IVs, or trying to leave the room) can’t be stopped, medication is the default remedy.
However, with medication comes increased risk for delirium, falls, and further cognitive decline. Consequently, dementia-friendly training helps staff create an environment of trust among patients. Furthermore, with greater trust comes more cooperation and fewer difficult behaviors. In turn, this helps prevent over-medication and poor health outcomes after hospitalization.
“The biggest piece of this is awareness and understanding. We have to change our behavior, because patients with dementia can’t change theirs.” Jenny Van Gils, OTR / L, an occupational therapist at Hillsborough

Benefits of trained, dementia-friendly staff
What are the benefits of training all staff who interact with patients? Now, every encounter with dementia patients has a better chance of going smoothly. Due to their training, dementia-friendly staff gain a new set of skills to use in various situations. Also, the training empowers staff to act with greater empathy and understanding.