Category Care

Contrast Sensitivity in Dementia

Contrast Sensitivity in Dementia Contrast sensitivity is the eye’s ability to tell the difference between an object and its background, like seeing a gray sock on a gray carpet. In people with dementia, this skill often weakens early on, making…

Color Coding for Dementia Care

Color Coding for Dementia Care People with dementia often feel lost or confused in their surroundings. Color coding offers a simple way to make spaces easier to understand and navigate. This approach uses bright, distinct colors on doors, walls, hallways,…

Visual Cues for Memory Support

Visual Cues for Memory Support Our brains love pictures and patterns. They help us remember things better than words alone. Think about sticking a note on your fridge with a bright drawing. That image sticks in your mind and reminds…

Labeling and Dementia Navigation

Labeling and Dementia Navigation Living with dementia can make everyday tasks confusing, but simple tools like labels help people stay independent at home. Labels are clear signs or stickers placed on doors, drawers, and items to remind someone where things…

Environmental Cues and Cognitive Support

Environmental Cues and Cognitive Support Our surroundings send signals that quietly guide our thoughts and choices every day. These signals, called environmental cues, can push us toward habits that help or hurt us. Understanding them lets us redesign spaces to…

Simplifying Choices for Dementia Patients

Simplifying Choices for Dementia Patients People with dementia often feel overwhelmed by too many decisions. Their brains struggle to process options, leading to confusion, frustration, or agitation. Caregivers can help by narrowing choices to just two or three simple ones…

Choice Overload and Dementia Anxiety

Choice Overload and Dementia Anxiety People with dementia often feel overwhelmed by too many options in their daily lives. This is called choice overload. When faced with many decisions, like picking clothes or food, they can get anxious, confused, or…

Decision Fatigue in Cognitive Decline

Decision Fatigue in Cognitive Decline Every day, people make thousands of choices, from what to eat for breakfast to how to handle work tasks. Experts estimate we face over 35,000 decisions daily, which adds up to one every two seconds.…

Problem Solving Decline in Dementia

Problem Solving Decline in Dementia People with dementia often struggle more and more with solving everyday problems. This happens because the brain areas that handle planning, decision making, and fixing issues start to weaken over time. Simple choices, like what…

Planning Difficulties in Early Dementia

Planning Difficulties in Early Dementia People in the early stages of dementia often struggle with planning ahead or figuring out steps for everyday activities. This happens because changes in the brain make it hard to organize thoughts, focus, and break…