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6 Tips for Better Dementia Communication

Teepa Snow Positive Approach to Care on Dementia Map

6 Tips for Better Dementia Communication
Submitted by Teepa Snow

Positive Approach to Care

When a person is living with dementia, communication can sometimes become difficult. As a person’s brain is changing, their ability to comprehend and process vocabulary can decrease.

Learning how to get started at communicating better can therefore become critically important. We sometimes underestimate how soon issues with communication start and may miss the early signals that someone is probably struggling a bit more than they used to.

Every one of us has been in a situation where you couldn’t think of the right word, and so had to pause. In a healthy brain, the normal reaction to someone offering you a word is: “oh good, now we can move on.”

Whereas when someone is living with dementia, suddenly jumping in with a word can cause confusion, as now they have to look at that word and figure out if that’s the word they were looking for. And when you factor in memory problems, it’s probable they’ll have a hard time remembering what their word was in the first place.

Teepa Snow on Dementia Map
Courtesy TeepaSnow.com

To help you get started with better dementia communication, we have included five tips that we use here at Positive Approach to Care® that you may want to think about, be aware of, and practice.

1. Matching your pace to theirs

If your person living with dementia is beginning to slow down, Teepa suggests slowing yourself down a bit as well. By practicing being more comfortable with pauses and not rushing in right away to make suggestions, you are giving the person living with dementia an extra moment to possibly recall the word they were looking for.

2. Reflection

If the person living with dementia continues to struggle with word-finding, rather than adding to what he or she said, it can be very helpful to first repeat back to them what you heard. By doing so, the person living with dementia can hear what they’ve said so far, which can help them continue the conversation.

For example, if a person says I’m looking for something to…uhhh…, you might give the person a moment, and then assist by saying So you’re looking for something you could…*pause*, and see if your person living with dementia can fill in the blank.

3. This or something else

If your person living with dementia is still struggling to find a word, you might ask: Are you looking for something to drink, or something else? By offering one specific word and one overly general word, you’re less likely to distract the person living with dementia from the word they’re trying to think of, but still assist them in communicating with you as you’ve given them two words he or she can say.

As Teepa recently explained, the “This or Something Else” approach is referred to as exclusionary categories, which can be very helpful as they assist but don’t limit the person living with dementia to anything specific.

4. Tell me more about it (Circumlocution)

If you’re still unsure what your person living with dementia is trying to communicate, try asking: “Can you tell me more about it?” With this question, what you’re really asking for is do you have other words you could use aside from the one you’re looking for? And if they use these other words to talk around the word they’re missing (a process called circumlocution), it can help you as a care partner figure out what they’re trying to communicate.

5. Visuals

When word-processing abilities decrease as the brain changes, pointing at a related object when talking to your person living with dementia can help increase mutual understanding. For example, if you’re trying to find out what your person living with dementia would like to drink, you could ask Would you like a coffee [pointing at a coffee mug], or something else? Being able to see the object you’re asking about will likely help your person living with dementia process your question, and make communication a little bit easier.

6. Bilinguals

People who speak multiple languages may have a harder time as their brain begins to change, as they have two vocabulary sets to go look in when trying to find a word and communicate. So if you are a care partner of a person who has English as their second language, you may benefit from getting really good, really fast by integrating objects into your communications, not just words.

Practice, Practice, Practice

As you’re trying out these communication tips, don’t get discouraged if you forget a tip or rush to answer when the person living with dementia may have just needed a moment more. As with anything worth doing in life, practice is the key to success. Or as Jim Rohn famously said: “Success is nothing more than a few simple disciplines, practiced every day.”


Teepa Snow Positive Approach to Care on Dementia MapTeepa Snow
Positive Approach to Care

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