- Insider Dementia Care Strategies Made Easy for Home Caregivers
- Posts
- Why your loved one resists care, and what to do about it
Why your loved one resists care, and what to do about it
Also in this edition: AI in caregiving; identifying dementia before middle age; know when it's time for home care and what to expect; coping with finances as a Sandwich Generation caregiver
In this edition: |
---|
• 📰 This Week in Dementia News 📰 |
📰 This Week in Dementia News 📰
Home Care and Finance and AI, Oh My!
How to Use Artificial Intelligence to Answer Important Caregiving Questions (AARP): a quick and easy introduction to some AI tools like ChatGPT, and the questions to enter (prompts) to get answers about care.
Exploring AI's creative potential in dementia care (The Keyword): AI may offer new ways to enhance reminiscence therapy by generating a wider range of detailed and personalized recollections.
The Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease (Aging Care): the Alzheimer’s Association has created a framework of seven stages of Alzheimer’s disease that helps us understand the progression and what to expect.
7 Signs At-Home Care Is Needed for Someone With Dementia (VeryWellHealth): In-home care can help maximize independence and the time a loved one can live at home. How do we know, however, when it’s time to take this step and where to look for the best help?
Signs Of Dementia, Alzheimer's Can Appear Prior To Middle Age (InsideNova): this is the first study to look at risk factors of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease in a large group of generally healthy younger adults.
I'm 38, a single dad and primary caregiver to my mom — how do I support everyone without going broke? (Yahoo! Finance): if you relate to this sandwich generation caregiver, you’ll appreciate the practical suggestions here.
Are You Ready for Your AI Caregiving Assistant?
Dementia care — and caregivers — will rely more and more heavily on AI in the coming years. With AI assistance, caregivers will be able to put more effort into communication and relationships with less time devoted to things like medication prompts and care schedules.
Those who best understand how to use AI as a tool will see the greatest benefit to their caregiving, and now is the time to start learning more so you can take advantage of these tools as they become available.
The Rundown AI is one of the best free resources on the topic. I read it on the daily to stay on top of this fast-moving subject. See if it could help you too.
Stay up-to-date with AI
The Rundown is the most trusted AI newsletter in the world, with 1,000,000+ readers and exclusive interviews with AI leaders like Mark Zuckerberg, Demis Hassibis, Mustafa Suleyman, and more.
Their expert research team spends all day learning what’s new in AI and talking with industry experts, then distills the most important developments into one free email every morning.
Plus, complete the quiz after signing up and they’ll recommend the best AI tools, guides, and courses – tailored to your needs.
Caregiver’s Corner: Why they resist care, and how you can help
I’m going to set some ground rules between us for how today is going to go, OK?
You have to do this
You can’t do that
Eat now
Drink now
Get up
Sit down
Watch TV
Turn that thing off!
Take these pills; don’t worry about what they are
Go to the bathroom right now, and I’ll help
I don’t understand you…
But I know what’s best for you
OK, got all that? Are you ready and excited to comply with my plan for your life?
Is this how your caregiving might sound to your loved one? Even if you don’t say it like this, might they hear it like this? In the rush of things, has your care stopped sounding like a conversation and started sounding like a command?
It happens to all of us. We get into a productive routine that, over time, turns into a rut. To you, the routine has been effective and you try to continue it. But how does your loved one feel about a routine they can’t remember as being beneficial?
If they have lost the context of your years of productive routine together, it’s not a routine for them anymore, even if it is for you. Simple prompts that seem to you like shortcuts based on the context of your caregiving relationship may sound like an order to them.
An example: let’s say your loved one can’t remember who you are today. A “stranger” (you) walks up to them, hands them some unknown pills, and says “take these.” How would you feel about that?
Now let’s say you have a teenager and someone walks up to them at a party, hands them pills, and says “take these.” What would you want them to do? Does that put it in a different context?
Our routines function as shortcuts in life. It’s like when you know a friend or spouse so well that you can have a a whole conversation in single glance. There’s just so much history. However, when that history is taken away and we still try to have that relationship, the steps we shortcut can feel abrupt, condescending, and dehumanizing.
A reminder from a friend can sound like a command from a stranger. When’s the last time someone helped you to go to the bathroom, get in a strange car, or brush your teeth.
There are a lot of reasons why your loved one might resist care, but a breakdown in communication is perhaps the most common one. As language and memory suffer, along with the ability to perform the Activities of Daily Living (ADLs), the frustration that results is, if we’re putting ourselves in their shoes, predictable.
What isn’t always predictable is how we can start communicating effectively again. Your loved one may not be able to participate in the old routine or communicate their needs with you. However, you still know them and their tendencies.
What are their hot buttons? What do they hate? What do they love? How do they like to be talked to? What will soothe them?
At 48, my partner already redirects me when I get aggravated: she knows me and can respond dynamically to the situation. I do the same for her. Even if one of us couldn’t recognize the other, we would still probably respond in ways that were consistent with our personalities and quirks.
That’s one of the big tricks: when you focus on completing a task the same way you always have, your loved one may resist the situation.
However, when you respond to their personality and needs, even the needs they can’t communicate anymore, you can find a way to speak to who they are while still accomplishing the task. Go with the flow.
Communication is one of the topics I cover in my larger course on resisting care. If you want more information on this subject, that’s a good place to start.
In many ways, resistance to care is at the heart of most dementia behaviors. If you master the communication around this subject, everything else gets easier.
🌟Featured Course this Week:🌟Resisting Care
If you’ve struggled with assisting your loved one with any dementia behavior, resistance to care has probably been a factor. It can be so demoralizing when you’re trying to help and getting abuse and refusals in return. This module helps you understand why you run into that resistance, as well as communication and environmental strategies that will help you get to the other side. If you’re struggling with dementia behaviors, start with this lesson to begin unraveling the causes and finding solutions. |

Could this newsletter help someone you know? Tell them about www.dementianewsletter.com or forward this email.
When you’re ready for a deeper dive, here’s how I can help:
I offer the following additional resources when you need a hand:
| ![]() Ben Couch |
P.S. Was today’s newsletter useful to you? Have ideas on what I should publish next? Take the poll below or reply to this email to give me feedback. I read every response personally.
How did you like today's newsletter? |
Hi! I’m Ben, and I’m the author of this newsletter as well as a new book on Amazon: Creating Purposeful Engagement.
Caring for a loved one with dementia can feel overwhelming, especially when it comes to keeping them engaged in daily life. In my new book, Creating Purposeful Engagement, I’ll guide you through practical, reliable strategies to spark meaningful moments of connection—whether through conversation, activities, or shared experiences.
Available now on Amazon—click to get your copy today!
************************
I’ve been a dementia professional for over 20 years, but the fight against this disease has become much more personal for me as I am engaged in my mother’s journey with Alzheimer’s disease. I started The Dementia Newsletter as well as it’s parent company, elumenEd, to help caregivers — specifically home and family caregivers — gain access to the very best training and information available at an affordable price.
At The Dementia Newsletter, we’re dementia professionals but we’re not medical doctors or lawyers. The information provided is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered as medical or legal advice. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional for medical diagnosis, treatment, or any health-related concerns and consult with a lawyer regarding any legal matters.
Reply