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presented by Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA
Financial: Teepa Snow receives compensation from MedBridge for this course. There is no financial interest beyond the production of this course.
Non-Financial: Teepa Snow has no competing non-financial interests or relationships with regard to the content presented in this course.
Satisfactory completion requirements: All disciplines must complete learning assessments to be awarded credit, no minimum score required unless otherwise specified within the course.
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Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA
Teepa Snow is an advocate for those living with dementia and has made it her personal mission to help families and professionals better understand how it feels to be living with such challenges and seeks to change and improve life for everyone involved. Her practice has included everything from neuro-intensive care units in tertiary hospitals…
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1. The New Language of Dementia
This chapter will review the meaning of dementia: a syndrome with multiple forms/types: progressive, irreversible, and terminal. The course will also cover what happens to the brain when Alzheimer’s starts (chemical changes) and progresses (structural changes) resulting in constant variability with a forward progression of deterioration overall.
2. What is Changing in the Brain and What Happens in Care Situations? Part One
This chapter will discuss and demonstrate typical behaviors that accompany changes in the ability for the following functions in combination with ineffective versus effective caregiver responses and interaction behaviors: memory, way-finding, and time awareness abilities, language abilities compared to a hearing capacity.
3. What is Changing in the Brain and What Happens in Care Situations? Part Two
This chapter will discuss and demonstrate typical behaviors that accompany changes in the ability for the following functions in combination with ineffective caregiver responses and interaction behaviors: pre-frontal executive control abilities, threat perception, pleasure-seeking, and needs meeting changes, core life function changes, sensory-motor abilities, visual abilities.
4. Choosing to Address the Changes in the Brain During Care
This chapter will discuss and demonstrate typical behaviors that accompany changes in the ability for the following functions in combination with effective caregiver responses and interaction behaviors: pre-frontal executive control abilities, memory, way-finding, and time awareness abilities, threat perception, pleasure-seeking, and needs meeting changes, core life function changes, language abilities compared to hearing capacity, sensory-motor abilities, and visual abilities. Role play of various situations will be used to demonstrate effective alternatives to these various symptoms of the condition.
5. Recognizing For All That is Lost, There is Something Left
This chapter will review the value of noticing changes in ability when attempting interactions and providing care and support.
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