
Person-centred dementia care aims to enhance the wellbeing of persons living with dementia by meeting their psychological needs, which maintains personhood.
Person-centred dementia care aims to enhance the wellbeing of persons living with dementia by meeting their psychological needs, which maintains personhood.
Person-centred care (PCC) is a way of thinking about a person living with dementia and how to support them to enhance their quality of life.
When caring for a person living with dementia, it is sometimes difficult to understand why a person behaves in the way they do, or make decisions related to the activities they should engage in.
PCC focuses on:
This is different from the medical model of care, which:
To maintain personhood in the face of a person’s declining mental powers.
By meeting the 5 areas of psychological need that each person experiences.
Tom Kitwood’s Flower of Psychological Needs shows the needs that each person, including persons living with dementia, has. These needs are: Comfort, Attachment, Inclusion, Occupation, Identity, and Love.
While caring for persons living with dementia, we can aim to meet these needs.
Person-Centred Care in Dementia by Alzheimer’s WA
Read on to find out how to apply the person-centred care approach in everyday life with persons living with dementia.
1. Kitwood, T. M. (1997). Dementia Reconsidered: The Person Comes First. Open University Press.