Part 1 The contemporary scene: a time of change; what is dementia?; the creation and re-creation of Alzheimer's disease; what is wrong with the organic model?, the implications of the organic model; therapeutic disdain - therapy, therapists and older people with dementia. Part 2 A psychological model: seeing the person in context - the sociological, the social and the social psychological; a model of the mind in dementia - an initial framework; the person-focused approach - what is it like to be a person diagnozed as having dementia?; the emotional world - coping with destruction of self/identity. Part 3 Applying the psychological model: improving the quality of assesment - a systemic approach; therapeutic interventions; later interventions; implications of our model for service delivery and future development. Part 4 Forces in the future: the kings and queens on the chessboard; restless farewell.
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Description
Understanding Dementia has been written for a diverse readership including direct careworkers, planners and policy makers... Its style is direct, accessible and sometimes outspoken. The book is an ambitious one. It presents the first truly psychological model of dementia and sets this, and its service implications, within a historical, social, economic and political context.