Memory loss and other cognitive decline threaten people's capacities to make sense of the world and their position within it. In Alzheimer's Disease (AD), such losses occur when the desire to make sense of the experienced world remains. When this desire cannot be satisfied, confusion, agitation, or anger may result. In these situations, a resolution aiming at the truth is not guaranteed to work, and may even exacerbate a difficult situation, since losses to sense making may damage even the receptivity to it. When the truth is out of reach in this way, the aim ought to be instead to create the conditions of proper fit – a fit that is intelligible – between current experience, self-image, and a world that makes sense. We argue that this aim r...
Dementia is a condition that forces us to reconsider what span of time we are referring to when we u...
Being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease marks a status passage formally legitimating the incorporat...
Conventional scientific definitions of dementia, or its newer proposed alternate—neurocognitive diso...
In this article, caring, remembering and sharing memory are presented as moral responses, the case s...
People with Alzheimer's dementia experience significant neuropsychological decline, and this seems t...
Does Alzheimer Disease show a decline in cognitive functions that relate to the awareness of externa...
‘The stage presents things that are make-believe; presumably real life presents things that are real...
Many caregivers feel that they need to lie or withhold the truth from people living with dementia, b...
Objectives: Care of patients with dementia raises challenging ethical issues, including the use of d...
This paper explores contemporary approaches to balancing truth with the provision of hope during the...
The concept of quality of life plays a controversial role in the care ofpatients with Alzheimer’s di...
Could the principle of respect for autonomy - a principle that is considered so essential nowadays -...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, dementia has become a widely feared and common disease...
It is argued that the way in which we view a person with dementia can have a significant effect on t...
It is argued that the way in which we view a person with dementia can have a significant effect on t...
Dementia is a condition that forces us to reconsider what span of time we are referring to when we u...
Being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease marks a status passage formally legitimating the incorporat...
Conventional scientific definitions of dementia, or its newer proposed alternate—neurocognitive diso...
In this article, caring, remembering and sharing memory are presented as moral responses, the case s...
People with Alzheimer's dementia experience significant neuropsychological decline, and this seems t...
Does Alzheimer Disease show a decline in cognitive functions that relate to the awareness of externa...
‘The stage presents things that are make-believe; presumably real life presents things that are real...
Many caregivers feel that they need to lie or withhold the truth from people living with dementia, b...
Objectives: Care of patients with dementia raises challenging ethical issues, including the use of d...
This paper explores contemporary approaches to balancing truth with the provision of hope during the...
The concept of quality of life plays a controversial role in the care ofpatients with Alzheimer’s di...
Could the principle of respect for autonomy - a principle that is considered so essential nowadays -...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, dementia has become a widely feared and common disease...
It is argued that the way in which we view a person with dementia can have a significant effect on t...
It is argued that the way in which we view a person with dementia can have a significant effect on t...
Dementia is a condition that forces us to reconsider what span of time we are referring to when we u...
Being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease marks a status passage formally legitimating the incorporat...
Conventional scientific definitions of dementia, or its newer proposed alternate—neurocognitive diso...