A Loved One with Dementia: Insights and Tips for Teenagers


Price:
Sale price$69.99


Imprint: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
By: By Jean Rawitt
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
150

Description

Jean Rawitt is a freelance writer and a consultant for the Department of Volunteer Services at Mount Sinai Hospital (New York). For ten years, she oversaw the Varsity Volunteer Services at Mount Sinai where she developed and coordinated a program to recruit, train, supervise and mentor high-school students as volunteers on hospital inpatient units. She is the author of Volunteering: Insights and Tips for Teenagers (forthcoming, R&L).

Reviews

In A Loved One with Dementia: Insights and Tips for Teenager, Jean Rawitt presents an intimate, caring, and candid conversation demystifying dementia. By understanding dementia and its phases, teens will learn how to channel their youthful energy into "being there" - even during painful or embarrassing situations -- with a grandparent or other family member who suffers from progressive loss of cognitive functioning. With utmost sensitivity and compassion, Rawitt offers an array of resources that will help YOU as you help your loved one cope with dementia.--Bette Kerr, EdD, Professor Emerita, Hostos Community College, City University of New York (CUNY) Jean Rawitt has done a masterful job of describing the dementia experience and its impact on the individual, families, and society. This book provides up-to-date information on the prevalence and impact of dementia and provides practical suggestions on how teenagers can engage and communicate effectively with individuals suffering with dementia throughout the illness experience from mild to advanced stages of the disease. It provides sound advice about the importance of self-care activities that are important to employ given the toll that dementia can exact on loved ones. This book is must reading for teenagers who have family members that live with dementia as well as those interested in learning more about the dementia experience.--Cary Reid, Irving Sherwood Wright Associate Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine Jean Rawitt is a wise and kind guide to this difficult subject and this book will benefit both teenagers and their loved ones who are increasingly likely to develop dementia. In fact, I have already recommended this book to young people who are dealing with elderly relatives with dementia.--Charles Mobbs, Ph.D., professor of Neuroscience and Geriatrics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine While Loving Someone with Dementia is targeted to teens, it is a tremendously valuable book for anyone who knows someone with cognitive decline. A clear and consolidated guide to understanding dementia on a practical level, it provides a wealth of specific things to do and think about during every stage of a complicated disease. This book should be in the hands of every family member and health aide who helps with the care of someone with dementia.--Adi Loebl, MD, Adult and Geriatric Psychiatrist, Chief Medical Officer, Ackerman Institute for the Family

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