How the Montessori Approach helps people with Dementia
Summary
TLDRAnne Kelly, a registered nurse, discusses her work in Montessori methods for aged care and dementia. She emphasizes the importance of maintaining independence, dignity, and self-esteem for the elderly. Kelly highlights how even those with advanced dementia can improve through procedural memory and repetition. She advocates for environments that foster learning and exploration, encouraging a shift from traditional aged care to a Montessori approach that nurtures strengths, stimulates the senses, and fosters intergenerational connections. Her approach is centered on creating meaningful roles and supporting success for the elderly.
Takeaways
- 😊 Independence is crucial for everyone, regardless of age, and many people do not want to rely on strangers for basic tasks.
- 👩⚕️ Anne Kelly, a registered nurse, has been working in aged care Montessori for 12 years and has found Montessori methods for aging and dementia to be transformative.
- 🎯 Her mission is to raise awareness about a different way to care for elders, maintaining their independence, dignity, and self-esteem.
- 📛 Name badges can significantly help people with dementia recognize and communicate with others by name, boosting interaction.
- 🧠 People with dementia retain their procedural memory, meaning they improve with practice, even if they don't remember the past.
- 🥄 Instead of feeding people with dementia when they struggle, Montessori methods encourage activities that help maintain their ability to feed themselves.
- 📚 People with dementia can still learn, and it’s important not to give up on teaching them or assume they cannot learn new skills.
- 😊 Focusing on strengths, such as a nice smile, helps create meaning and roles for people with dementia, enhancing their sense of purpose.
- 👨🏫 Tailoring activities, like allowing a former French teacher with advanced dementia to teach French, helps maintain their identity and engagement.
- 🌳 Creating environments that stimulate the senses and encourage interaction, including intergenerational programs, fosters a stronger community for the elderly.
Q & A
What is the main goal of the Montessori method for aged care and dementia?
-The main goal of the Montessori method for aged care and dementia is to maintain the independence, dignity, and self-esteem of elderly individuals by offering support that focuses on their strengths and abilities.
Who is Anne Kelly and what is her role in aged care?
-Anne Kelly is a registered nurse who has been working in aged care for 12 years. She discovered the Montessori method for ageing and dementia and has since focused on promoting this approach to care for the elderly.
How does the use of name badges help residents with dementia?
-The use of name badges helps residents with dementia by enabling them to remember and address each other by name, fostering a sense of familiarity and connection.
What is procedural memory, and why is it important for people with dementia?
-Procedural memory is the memory related to skills, habits, and learned behaviors through repetition. It is important for people with dementia because it allows them to retain certain abilities and improve through practice, despite memory challenges.
How does the Montessori approach differ from traditional aged care in response to someone losing the ability to feed themselves?
-In traditional aged care, staff might start feeding a resident when they begin losing the ability to feed themselves to save time. In the Montessori approach, staff focus on activities to help maintain the resident's feeding ability for as long as possible.
What is the Montessori perspective on learning for people with dementia?
-The Montessori perspective believes that people with dementia can still learn new things, and they focus on teaching and enabling individuals rather than assuming they are unable to learn.
How does the Montessori approach address repetitive behaviors such as repeatedly asking about a spouse's visit?
-The Montessori approach seeks to teach residents ways to find answers themselves, like using visual cues or reminders, instead of simply responding to their repetitive questions.
What are some examples of strengths that the Montessori method utilizes for residents with dementia?
-Examples of strengths include a resident's smile or ability to greet others. The Montessori method finds roles for them based on these strengths, such as greeting others, to give them a sense of purpose and belonging.
How does intergenerational programming benefit residents in a Montessori care environment?
-Intergenerational programming, such as having playgrounds for grandchildren, helps keep elderly residents connected to their families and offers a more engaging and stimulating environment for all ages.
What is the overall philosophy of the Montessori approach in aged care?
-The Montessori philosophy in aged care is about setting residents up for success by focusing on their abilities and providing a supportive environment that encourages independence and meaningful engagement.
Outlines
🧓 Importance of Independence in Aged Care
Anne Kelly introduces herself as a registered nurse with over 12 years of experience in aged care using Montessori methods. She emphasizes the significance of independence in aged care, stressing that no one, regardless of age, wants to lose autonomy in basic tasks such as feeding, dressing, or toileting. Her journey into Montessori care has given her a mission to help others maintain dignity, self-esteem, and independence through these innovative methods.
📛 Impact of Name Badges on Dementia Care
Anne discusses the transformative impact of name badges in dementia care. She explains how name badges help residents with dementia communicate more easily with each other by name, leveraging their procedural memory, which remains relatively intact. This small change allows people to recognize and engage more naturally, enhancing their social interactions despite memory loss.
🧠 Strength of Procedural Memory in Dementia
Anne delves into the concept of procedural memory, explaining how repetition strengthens a person's ability to perform tasks, even if they cannot recall having done them before. She highlights how individuals with dementia can improve certain skills over time through repetition, despite other memory challenges. This insight is crucial in helping people with dementia retain important abilities.
🍽 Maintaining Independence in Feeding
Anne contrasts traditional aged care approaches with Montessori methods, particularly in cases where individuals start losing the ability to feed themselves. In conventional care, the response might be to assist with feeding immediately, but Montessori practices aim to maintain that skill for as long as possible through supportive activities. This helps preserve the person's autonomy and dignity.
🧑🏫 Learning and Teaching for People with Dementia
Anne shares her belief that people with dementia still have the capacity to learn and improve. She contrasts common aged care practices, which often give up on teaching, with Montessori care that focuses on teaching residents useful skills to address common behaviors like repetitive questioning. The Montessori approach focuses on enabling residents to function independently by building on their strengths.
😊 Finding Strengths in Simple Actions
Anne emphasizes how even small strengths, such as a resident's ability to smile, can be utilized to give them purpose and meaning. For example, someone with a warm smile could greet others in the dining room, providing them with a role and a sense of contribution. This approach helps people with dementia feel valued and connected to their community.
🇫🇷 A Former Teacher Shares His Strengths
Anne shares a heartwarming example of a man with advanced dementia who was a former French teacher. Despite his cognitive decline, he continues to offer French lessons to staff and other residents. This example highlights the Montessori philosophy of encouraging residents to use their remaining strengths to engage and contribute to the community.
🌷 Stimulating the Senses for Well-Being
Anne talks about the importance of creating an environment that stimulates all the senses in dementia care. She advocates for spaces that invite exploration and sensory engagement, filled with colors, textures, animals, flowers, and intergenerational programs. These elements keep residents connected to the world and enhance their quality of life.
👵👶 Intergenerational Programs in Montessori Care
Anne highlights the value of intergenerational programs in aged care communities, describing how Montessori environments foster interactions between the elderly and children. By adding playgrounds and seating areas, children and grandchildren can visit and interact with the residents, strengthening family connections and enhancing the community atmosphere.
🎯 Setting Residents Up for Success
Anne concludes by summarizing the core of Montessori care: setting residents up for success rather than failure. The focus is on creating environments and activities that allow residents to be successful in their endeavors, maintaining their independence, dignity, and sense of purpose for as long as possible.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Independence
💡Dignity
💡Montessori for dementia
💡Procedural memory
💡Enablement
💡Name badges
💡Repetitive questioning
💡Community
💡Intergenerational programs
💡Strengths-based approach
Highlights
Independence is crucial for all individuals, especially the elderly, as it preserves their dignity and self-esteem.
Anne Kelly, a registered nurse, has dedicated 12 years to Montessori methods in aged care, particularly for those with dementia.
Montessori methods for ageing focus on maintaining independence and dignity, offering an alternative to traditional aged care approaches.
Procedural memory, which includes skills, habits, and repetitive actions, remains strong in people with dementia, allowing them to improve over time even without conscious memory.
In Montessori aged care, the focus shifts from assisting residents immediately to creating activities that help maintain their skills, such as feeding themselves.
Rather than accepting the decline of abilities, Montessori care aims to sustain these abilities for as long as possible through targeted activities.
Montessori care emphasizes teaching people with dementia instead of giving up on their learning, even if it's small, day-to-day skills.
Name badges are a simple yet effective tool that help residents with dementia connect by using each other's names.
Montessori care focuses on strengths like a smile or a handshake, helping people with dementia find purpose and roles in the community.
A man with advanced dementia, formerly a French teacher, continues to run French lessons for staff and residents, showcasing the potential of Montessori care.
Creating a vibrant, sensory-rich environment stimulates the elderly and helps them engage with the world around them.
Montessori environments include activities that stimulate all senses—sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste—creating a more engaging space for residents.
Intergenerational programs, such as playgrounds in outdoor areas, help elderly residents maintain connections with their grandchildren.
Montessori care fosters community by encouraging interaction between the elderly and their loved ones, including through outdoor play areas.
The Montessori approach sets up residents for success by creating conditions that enable them to succeed, even with simple tasks.
Transcripts
None of us, regardless of our age, wants to be fed
or wants to be dressed or wants to be toileted by strangers.
Independence is so important for a soul. My name is Anne Kelly. I'm a registered
nurse by trade. I've been in aged care Montessori for about 12 years. I stumbled across Montessori
methods for ageing and dementia by accident. And since then, my life has totally changed.
It's changed because all of a sudden I had a mission to make people aware
that there was a different way to care for our elders and a different way to offer support
that would maintain their independence, their dignity, their self-esteem.
One of the best things and the easiest things to change and get responses from is the use of
name badges. Then all of a sudden, I see that the residents, the people living with dementia,
are able to talk to each other by name. A strength that people living with dementia have
is their procedural memory. That is their skills, their habits,
classical conditioning, and repetition priming. The more somebody does something, the better they
get, even though they have a memory problem. So think about it, you've got somebody with
advanced dementia who cannot remember having done anything ever before, but every time they do it,
they are better at it than the time before. That is one of the weird phenomena about our brain.
For example, somebody losing the ability to feed themselves.
Can you imagine? What it’s like to have somebody having to feed you? In traditional aged care, we
would write in the progress notes: “Jack is losing the ability to feed himself,” “So we better start
feeding him.” To save the mess and the time. In the Montessori world, we say: “Jack is
losing the ability to feed himself,” “So we need to put in activities
that will maintain that skill for as long as possible.”
I always look at people as having the ability to learn. One of the things that we very easily do
with people living with dementia is: we give up on teaching them anything. And so we have aged
care communities around the world who have people full of behaviours such as repetitive questioning.
“I can't find my room, where's my room?” “When is my husband coming?”
We say: “Okay, how can we teach somebody where their room is?” “How do we teach somebody
when their husband is going to come?” So it's a different focus. It's a focus on enablement
and it's a focus on the strengths. In my world, if somebody has got a nice smile, that's a strength.
How can I use that strength to give them meaning, to give them a role,
to make them feel that they matter? Somebody with a nice smile that can shake hands
can greet everybody into the dining room. Twice a day, for lunch and dinner. "It's lovely to see
you. It's lovely to see you." Imagine, again, being a person
living with dementia who every day is greeted into the dining room.
We have a gentleman who lives with very advanced dementia. But he was a French teacher. He now runs
French lessons for staff and for the other residents there who wish to learn French.
We need to create an environment that invites exploration, that invites colour, that invites
interest. The world is full of absolutely amazing things to see, to touch, to smell, to taste.
We've got to stimulate all the senses, animals, gardens, flowers, intergenerational programs
linking the young with the old. Many elderly people, for example,
have grandchildren. How often do their grandchildren visit? Very rarely. Why?
Because they come into a care community. “Sssht!” “Don't go there. Don't run. Don't touch that.”
So in a Montessori environment, we put playgrounds into the outdoor areas and we put seating. And the
old people can go out with their grandchildren. This is how you create a community. This is
how you keep people in touch with the people they love.
In a Montessori world, we set people up for success, not for failure.
And we do whatever is required for them to be successful in what they do.
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