Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Verna Benner Carson

    Dr. Verna Benner Carson is a Clinical Nurse Specialist in Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing. As an Associate Professor at Towson University, she educates undergraduate and graduate nursing students on the profound importance of compassionate patient care. She also leads C&V Senior Care Specialists, Inc., a consulting firm focused on programs she developed for Alzheimer's care and behavioral health. Dr. Carson is a nationally recognized speaker and author, with a significant body of work exploring spirituality within nursing and addressing psychiatric issues in home healthcare.

    Care Giving for Alzheimer's Disease
    • 2016

      Care Giving for Alzheimer's Disease

      • 130 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Veteran clinicians offer a unique framework for understanding the psychological origins of behaviors typical of Alzheimer's and other dementias, and for providing appropriate care for patients as they decline. Guidelines are rooted in the theory of retrogenesis in dementia--that those with the condition regress in stages toward infancy--as well as knowledge of associated brain damage. The objective is to meet patients where they are developmentally to best be able to address the tasks of their daily lives, from eating and toileting to preventing falls and wandering. This accessible information gives readers a platform for creating strategies that are respectful, sensitive, and tailored to individual needs, thus avoiding problems that result when care is ineffective or counterproductive. Featured in the coverage: Abilities and disabilities during the different stages of Alzheimer's disease. Strategies for keeping the patient's finances safe. Pain in those with dementia, and why it is frequently ignored. "Help! I've lost my mother and can't find her!" Sexuality and intimacy in persons with dementia. Instructive vignettes of successful caring interventions. Given the projected numbers of individuals expected to develop dementing conditions, Care Giving for Alzheimer’s Disease will find immediate interest among clinical psychologists, health psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, and primary care physicians.

      Care Giving for Alzheimer's Disease