My MIL is very sweet but has ALZ which seems to be progressing quickly; she is becoming more frantic recently calling many times per day, asking what to do, saying she doesn't know where she is, she wants to go home, etc. Has lost the ability to read and strings together strange sets of words most of the time (word salad).
What non-reading things can we do to her environment (room in very nice ALF) to reassure her that she is home, she is safe, that we know where she is, haven't abandoned her (if we have been gone 3 minutes we were never there). I'd hang a sign in her room but she can't read anymore. Can't work the TV anymore, etc. Staff are good but cannot be with her constantly.
My mom, at one stage of her dementia, calmed down when we gave her baby doll. Well, she grabbed it from my little niece and refused to give up the doll. After that, whenever she became agitated, we would just gently lay the 'baby' on her lap. Mom would cradle her and calm down. But that was the mild stage. When she progressed to the violent stage, only meds can calm her. Mom had 9 children. So, even though she forgot most things, she did not forget how to calm down so as not to upset the baby.
Is there something that your mom used to love to do that you can implement in her room? If she used to knit a lot, can you decorate her room with knitted objects?
But unfortunately, from time to time, she does get agitated, she is very sure someone had called her to tell her they are coming to take her back home, so I lie to her and I tell her not to worry that "it's tomorrow when they will get here" and she accepts this and calms down. After a short while, she had forgotten all about it.
It's so difficult to see the confusion and fears people with this illnesses have, there is very little we can do to ease this fears. If you haven't tried what I've suggested, give it a try, it might help.
However, if the DON reports that your MIL appears to be suffering from anxiety a good bit of her waking hours, I'd try drugs. It's heartbreaking, not only for you, but also for the staff, to have a resident who can't be made comfortable.
As for activities, is she one who likes to fuss with things (like folding, sorting, etc)? If so, bring in lots of napkins and ask her to fold them for you. Or, buy a bunch of multicolored copy paper, mix it up and ask her to sort it. Bring the next 'job' with you when you visit. Some people can be content with a large stack of magazines to page through, even though they've lost the ability to read.
ps – The more, the better! Dozens of napkins, hundreds of sheets of paper, a foot-high stack of magazines...you get the picture.
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