Dementia staff have senses
impaired during training to increase understanding of living with condition
Staff at a city
care home have been given an insight into life with dementia as part of a new
training scheme.
Members of Ivy Court Care Home, on Ivy Road,
Norwich, donned gloves, glasses, and ear plugs, before entering a room staged
to further impair their senses - to give them a taste of the challenges people
with the condition face daily.
Michele Saunders, who runs the scheme, said:
“We’re immersing them in practical understanding of what it feels like to live with
dementia every day.”
The training room contained flashing lights, low
background lighting, a blaring TV, and a switched-on vacuum cleaner.
Participants were then told to perform basic
tasks such as putting on a shirt and doing it up, pairing socks, completing a
puzzle, and finding a teddy bear.
The 12-minute experience is designed to simulate
the confusion, heightened sensitivity to sound, and loss of feeling in
extremeties, which are some of the symptoms of the various forms of dementia.
The programme is being rolled out across East
Anglia-based company Caring Homes Group UK, of which Ivy Court is part.
Ms Saunders, dementia training lead for the
company, added: “It’s about finding the difficulties that most of us take for
granted which dementia patients struggle with.
“For many staff it gives them a ‘lightbulb
moment’ and I hope it increases their empathy and ability to understand why and
how their mobility is affected.”
Billy McKee, one of the staff-members at Ivy
Court, said: “It was hard to do what we were asked.
“It taught me to allow the person time to use
the abilities they have.”
SOURCE: Eastern Daily Press. Nicholas Carding
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