This essential textbook on dementia care introduces the knowledge that nurses need, including the evidence base for practice and the guidance to transfer this newly acquired knowledge into everyday practice. Each of the 25 chapters are written by experts in the field of dementia care and are grounded in thoroughly researched, up-to-date evidence, have a direct bearing to nurse practice, and use case studies to give examples of application of the evidence to practice.
It begins by introducing dementia as a diagnosis, a syndrome, and a set of diseases, signs and symptoms. It then deals with various principles that underpin dementia care, including person-centred care, behaviours that challenge, risk management, and understanding relationships affected by dementia. Finally, it assesses dementia care across a range of care settings, such as primary care, care homes, domiciliary care, acute hospital, and hospice services.
Foreword by: Alistair Burns Contributions by: Malarvizhi Babu Sandilyan, Tom Dening, Hilda Hayo, Chris Knifton, Caroline Baker, Jan Leeks, Esme Moniz-Cook, Aileen Beatty, Julian C. Hughes, Sarah Rhynas, Charlotte L. Clarke, Jill Manthorpe, Stephen Martineau, Jane Youell, Helen Scott, Zena Aldridge, Frances Bunn, Claire Goodman, Cheryl Holman, Angela Moore, Liz Sampson, Jo Moriarty, Steve Iliffe, Katie Featherstone, Andy Northcott, Sharon Tolman