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Dementia (2nd Ed.) Person-Centered Assessment and Intervention

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Hickey Ellen, Bourgeois Michelle S.

Couverture de l’ouvrage Dementia

Person-centered care for persons with dementia has been developed and expanded over the last few decades. Speech-language pathologists are uniquely positioned to understand the striking impact that communication challenges have on persons with dementia and their caregivers, and can lead the charge to improve access to communication and participation. This volume serves as a starting point and reference manual for those who want to provide person-centered and life-enhancing services to persons with dementia, and to inspire the continued generation of quality research to demonstrate the value of cognitive-communication, behavioral, and caregiver interventions. It serves as a call to action for an interprofessional team of healthcare providers across healthcare settings to promote meaningful life engagement in persons with dementia using evidence-based assessment and intervention approaches.

This volume provides background on the evolution of caring for persons with dementia, as well as a description of the diagnostic process for dementia syndromes and the cognitive and communication characteristics of dementias with an emphasis on Alzheimer?s dementia. Its chapters cover the person-centered assessment process for persons with cognitive and communicative disorders of dementias; intervention approaches for the wide variety of cognitive, communicative, eating/swallowing, and behavioral symptoms and consequences of dementia syndromes; reimbursement and documentation issues for various settings in which persons with dementia are seen; and issues and challenges of quality of life and end-of-life care.

1. Introduction: History and Philosophy of Treatment in Dementia Michelle S. Bourgeois and Ellen M. Hickey 2. Clinical and Pathophysiological Profiles of Various Dementia Etiologies Tammy Hopper, Ellen M. Hickey, and Michelle S. Bourgeois 3. Cognitive-Communicative Characteristics: Profiling Types of Dementia Nidhi Mahendra, Ellen M. Hickey, and Michelle S. Bourgeois 4. Setting the Stage for Person-Centered Care: Intervention Principles and Practical Considerations Ellen M. Hickey, Renee Kinder, Becky Khayum, Natalie F. Douglas, and Michelle S. Bourgeois5. Assessment of Cognition, Communication, and Behavior Ellen M. Hickey, Becky Khayum, and Michelle S. Bourgeois 6. Cognitive and Communicative Interventions Ellen M. Hickey and Michelle S. Bourgeois 7. Interprofessional Interventions: Modifying the Physical and Social Environments Ellen M. Hickey, Michelle S. Bourgeois, and Jennifer Brush 8. Eating and Swallowing: Description, Assessment, and Intervention Ellen M. Hickey, Stuart Cleary, Pamela Coulter, and Michelle S. Bourgeois9. Caregiver and Family Issues Michelle S. Bourgeois 10. Professional and Paraprofessional Caregiver Training and Supervision Natalie F. Douglas, Michelle S. Bourgeois, and Ellen M. Hickey 11. Quality of Life and End of Life IssuesEllen M. Hickey and Michelle S. Bourgeois

Ellen M. Hickey, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, is Associate Professor of speech-language pathology at Dalhousie University. Her teaching, practice, and research specialize in quality of life and treatment for persons with neurogenic communication disorders, including the cognitive-communicative disorders caused by dementia syndromes.

Michelle S. Bourgeois, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, ASHA Fellow, is Professor of speech-language pathology at the University of South Florida. She specializes in interventions for persons with dementia and their caregivers. She has published numerous research articles, training manuals and CDs, and books on dementia interventions.