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36-Hour Day, 5th Edition: A Family Guide to Caring for People Who Have Alzheimer's Disease, Related Dementias, and Memory Loss [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 624 pages, height x width x depth: 191x110x45 mm, weight: 330 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Oct-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Grand Central Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1455521159
  • ISBN-13: 9781455521159
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 25,05 €*
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 624 pages, height x width x depth: 191x110x45 mm, weight: 330 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Oct-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Grand Central Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1455521159
  • ISBN-13: 9781455521159
Provides practical and legal advice on caring for those who can no longer care for themselves, including information on dealing with such daily problems as eating and exercising, and suggests ways to cope with mood swings and false ideas.

When someone in your family suffers from Alzheimer disease or other related memory loss diseases, both you and your loved one face immense challenges. For over thirty years, this book has been the trusted bible for families affected by dementia disorders. Now completely revised and updated, this guide features the latest information on the causes of dementia, managing the early stages of dementia, the prevention of dementia, and finding appropriate living arrangements for the person who has dementia when home care is no longer an option.

You'll learn:
-The basic facts about dementia
-How to deal with problems arising in daily care-- meals, exercise, personal hygiene, and safety
-How to cope with an impaired person's false ideas, suspicion, anger, and other mood problems
-How to get outside help from support groups, friends, and agencies
-Financial and legal issues you must address.

Comprehensive and compassionate, THE 36-HOUR DAY is the only guide you need to help your family through this difficult time.

Papildus informācija

This top-selling backlist title, considered the bible on family care for Alzheimer patients, is newly revised and updated in a fifth edition.
Foreword xvii
Preface xxi
Acknowledgments xxvii
1 Dementia
1(18)
What Is Dementia?
8(4)
The Person Who Has Dementia
12(5)
Where Do You Go from Here?
17(2)
2 Getting Medical Help for the Person Who Has Dementia
19(16)
The Evaluation of the Person with a Suspected Dementia
20(7)
Finding Someone to Do an Evaluation
27(2)
The Medical Treatment and Management of Dementia
29(6)
The Physician
29(2)
The Nurse
31(1)
The Social Worker
32(1)
The Geriatric Care Manager
33(1)
The Pharmacist
34(1)
3 Characteristic Behavioral Symptoms in People Who Have Dementia
35(43)
The Brain, Behavior, and Personality: Why People Who Have Dementia Do the Things They Do
36(6)
Caregiving: Some General Suggestions
42(5)
Memory Problems
47(1)
Overreacting, or Catastrophic Reactions
48(9)
Combativeness
57(1)
Problems with Speech and Communication
58(11)
Problems the Person with Dementia Has in Making Himself Understood
59(5)
Problems the Person with Dementia Has in Understanding Others
64(5)
Loss of Coordination
69(5)
Loss of Sense of Time
74(2)
Symptoms That Are Better Sometimes and Worse at Other Times
76(2)
4 Problems in Independent Living
78(27)
Mild Cognitive Impairment
78(4)
Managing the Early Stages of Dementia
80(2)
When a Person Must Give Up a Job
82(2)
When a Person Can No Longer Manage Money
84(2)
When a Person Can No Longer Drive Safely
86(7)
When a Person Can No Longer Live Alone
93(12)
When You Suspect That Someone Living Alone Is Developing Dementia
94(4)
What You Can Do
98(1)
Moving to a New Residence
99(6)
5 Problems Arising in Daily Care
105(70)
Hazards to Watch For
105(11)
In the House
108(4)
Outdoors
112(2)
In the Car
114(1)
Highways and Parking Lots
115(1)
Smoking
115(1)
Hunting
116(1)
Nutrition and Mealtimes
116(16)
Meal Preparation
117(1)
Mealtimes
118(3)
Problem Eating Behaviors
121(4)
Malnutrition
125(1)
Weight Loss
126(1)
Choking
127(2)
When to Consider Tube Feeding
129(3)
Exercise
132(3)
Recreation
135(5)
Meaningful Activity
139(1)
Personal Hygiene
140(12)
Bathing
143(3)
Locating Care Supplies
146(2)
Dressing
148(1)
Grooming
149(1)
Oral Hygiene
150(2)
Incontinence (Wetting or Soiling)
152(10)
Urinary Incontinence
153(6)
Bowel Incontinence
159(1)
Cleaning Up
160(2)
Problems with Walking and Balance; Falling
162(7)
Becoming Chairbound or Bedfast
165(3)
Wheelchairs
168(1)
Changes You Can Make at Home
169(6)
Should Environments Be Cluttered or Bare?
172(3)
6 Medical Problems
175(39)
Pain
178(1)
Falls and Injuries
179(1)
Pressure Sores
180(1)
Dehydration
181(1)
Pneumonia
182(1)
Constipation
182(3)
Medications
185(4)
Dental Problems
189(1)
Vision Problems
190(3)
Hearing Problems
193(1)
Dizziness
194(1)
Visiting the Doctor
195(1)
If the Ill Person Must Enter the Hospital
196(3)
Seizures, Fits, or Convulsions
199(3)
Jerking Movements (Myoclonus)
202(1)
The Death of the Person with Dementia
202(12)
The Cause of Death
203(1)
Dying at Home
203(2)
Hospice
205(1)
Dying in the Hospital or Nursing Home
205(1)
When Should Treatment End?
206(2)
What Kind of Care Can Be Given at the End of Life?
208(6)
7 Behavioral Symptoms of Dementia
214(54)
The Six R's of Behavior Management
215(2)
Concealing Memory Loss
217(3)
Wandering
220(14)
Reasons That People Wander
220(3)
The Management of Wandering
223(11)
Sleep Disturbances and Night Wandering
234(5)
Worsening in the Evening ("Sundowning")
239(3)
Losing, Hoarding, or Hiding Things
242(1)
Rummaging in Drawers and Closets
243(1)
Inappropriate Sexual Behavior
244(4)
Repeating the Question
248(1)
Repetitious Actions
249(1)
Distractibility
250(1)
Clinging or Persistently Following You Around ("Shadowing")
251(2)
Complaints and Insults
253(5)
Taking Things
258(1)
Forgetting Telephone Calls
259(1)
Demands
260(3)
Stubbornness and Uncooperativeness
263(1)
When the Person with Dementia Insults the Sitter
264(2)
Using Medication to Manage Behavior
266(2)
8 Symptoms That Appear as Changes in Mood
268(28)
Depression
268(2)
Complaints about Health
270(1)
Suicide
271(1)
Alcohol or Drug Abuse
271(1)
Apathy and Listlessness
272(2)
Remembering Feelings
274(1)
Anger and Irritability
274(3)
Anxiety, Nervousness, and Restlessness
277(3)
False Ideas, Suspiciousness, Paranoia, and Hallucinations
280(1)
Misinterpretation
281(2)
Failure to Recognize People or Things (Agnosia)
283(11)
"You Are Not My Husband"
284(1)
"My Mother Is Coming for Me"
284(1)
Suspiciousness
285(5)
Hiding Things
290(1)
Delusions and Hallucinations
291(3)
Having Nothing to Do
294(2)
9 Special Arrangements If You Become Ill
296(6)
In the Event of Your Death
299(3)
10 Getting Outside Help
302(33)
Help from Friends and Neighbors
303(2)
Finding Information and Services
305(2)
Kinds of Services
307(7)
Having Someone Come into Your Home
309(1)
Adult Day Care
310(3)
Short-Stay Residential Care
313(1)
Planning in Advance for Home Care or Day Care
314(1)
When the Person with Dementia Rejects the Care
315(4)
Your Own Feelings about Getting Respite for Yourself
319(3)
Locating Resources
322(4)
Paying for Care
326(3)
Should Respite Programs Mix People Who Have Different Problems?
329(2)
Determining the Quality of Services
331(2)
Research and Demonstration Programs
333(2)
11 You and the Person Who Has Dementia as Parts of a Family
335(35)
Changes in Roles
338(7)
Understanding Family Conflicts
345(4)
Division of Responsibility
346(3)
Your Marriage
349(1)
Coping with Role Changes and Family Conflict
350(7)
A Family Conference
353(4)
When You Live out of Town
357(2)
When You Are Not the Primary Caregiver, What Can You Do to Help?
359(2)
Caregiving and Your Job
361(1)
Your Children
362(8)
Teenagers
367(3)
12 How Caring for a Person Who Has Dementia Affects You
370(37)
Emotional Reactions
370(22)
Anger
372(5)
Embarrassment
377(2)
Helplessness
379(1)
Guilt
380(4)
Laughter, Love, and Joy
384(1)
Grief
385(3)
Depression
388(1)
Isolation and Feeling Alone
389(1)
Worry
390(1)
Being Hopeful and Being Realistic
391(1)
Mistreating the Person with Dementia
392(2)
Physical Reactions
394(2)
Fatigue
394(1)
Illness
395(1)
Sexuality
396(4)
If Your Spouse Has Dementia
397(3)
IF Your Impaired Parent Lives with You
400(1)
The Future
400(6)
You as a Spouse Alone
403(3)
When the Person You Have Cared for Dies
406(1)
13 Caring for Yourself
407(21)
Take Time Out
408(5)
Give Yourself a Present
410(1)
Friends
411(1)
Avoid Isolation
412(1)
Find Additional Help If You Need It
413(8)
Recognize the Warning Signs
414(3)
Counseling
417(4)
Joining with Other Families: The Alzheimer's Association
421(4)
Support Groups
422(2)
Excuses
424(1)
Advocacy
425(3)
14 For Children and Teenagers
428(6)
15 Financial and Legal Issues
434(22)
Your Financial Assessment
434(11)
Potential Expenses
435(2)
Potential Resources
437(8)
Where to Look for the Forgetful Person's Resources
445(4)
Legal Matters
449(7)
16 Nursing Homes and Other Living Arrangements
456(55)
Types of Living Arrangements
459(8)
Moving with the Person Who Has Dementia
467(10)
Finding a Nursing Home or Other Residential Care Setting
477(17)
Paying for Care
480(4)
Guidelines for Selecting a Nursing Home or Other Residential Care Facility
484(10)
Moving to a Nursing Home or Other Residential Care Facility
494(3)
Adjusting to a New Life
497(11)
Visiting
497(5)
Your Own Adjustment
502(3)
When Problems Occur in the Nursing Home or Other Residential Care Facility
505(3)
Sexual Issues in Nursing Homes or Other Care Facilities
508(3)
17 Preventing or Delaying Cognitive Decline
511(11)
Normal Changes
512(1)
General Mental and Physical Health
512(1)
Lifestyle Factors
513(2)
Physical Exercise
513(2)
Diet
515(1)
Potential Treatments and Cures
515(4)
Mental Exercise
515(3)
Medications and Vitamins
518(1)
Limiting Exposure to Toxic Chemicals
519(2)
Aluminum
520(1)
Head Injury
521(1)
18 Brain Disorders and the Causes of Dementia
522(23)
Mild Cognitive Impairment
523(1)
Dementia
524(16)
Alcohol Abuse Associated Dementia
525(1)
Alzheimer Disease
526(3)
Cortical Basal Ganglionic Degeneration
529(1)
Depression
529(1)
The Frontotemporal Dementias
530(2)
HIV-AIDS
532(2)
Lewy Body Dementia
534(1)
Primary Progressive Aphasia
535(1)
Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
536(1)
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI or Head Trauma)
537(1)
Vascular Dementia
538(1)
Young or Early Onset Dementia
539(1)
Other Brain Disorders
540(5)
Delirium
540(2)
Korsakoff Syndrome
542(1)
Stroke and Other Localized Brain Injury
542(1)
Transient Ischemic Attack
543(2)
19 Research in Dementia
545(32)
Understanding Research
546(4)
Bogus Cures
550(1)
Research in Vascular Dementia and Stroke
550(2)
Research in Alzheimer Disease
552(11)
Structural Changes in the Brain
552(1)
Brain Cells
552(1)
Neuroplasticity
553(1)
Neurotransmitters
553(2)
Abnormal Proteins
555(1)
Protein Abnormalities within Brain Cells
556(1)
Nerve Growth Factors
557(1)
Transplants of Brain Tissue
557(1)
Drug Studies
558(2)
Metals
560(1)
Prions
561(1)
Immunological Defects
561(1)
Head Trauma
562(1)
Epidemiology
563(1)
Down Syndrome
564(1)
Old Age
564(1)
Heredity
565(4)
Gender
569(1)
Neuropsychological Testing
569(1)
Brain Imaging
570(2)
Keeping Active
572(1)
The Effect of Acute Illness on Dementia
573(1)
Research into the Delivery of Services
574(1)
Protective Factors
575(2)
Appendix 1 Using the Internet 577(4)
Appendix 2 Organizations 581(8)
Index 589
Nancy L. Mace, MA, now retired, was a consultant to and a member of the board of directors of the Alzheimer Association and an assistant in psychiatry as coordinator of the T. Rowe and Eleanor Price Teaching Service of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Peter V. Rabins, MD, MPH, is the Richman Family Professor of Alzheimer Disease and Related Disorders in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He has joint appointments at the Bloomberg School of Public Health in the Departments of Mental Health and Health Policy and Management. Rabins is also the director of the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neuropsychiatry, the T. Rowe and Eleanor Price Teaching Service, and the Jane K. Schapiro Family-Centered Dementia Care Program.