Responding to agitation in people with dementia
Intended for healthcare professionals
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Responding to agitation in people with dementia

Jan Dewing Head of person-centred research and practice development/professor, East Sussex Community Health/Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent

Although medication and physical restraint have traditionally been used to treat agitated behaviours, there is growing evidence that holistic approaches can be beneficial, says Jan Dewing

Agitation is a symptom rather than a condition and thus an indicator of, for example, unmet care needs or biopsychosocial problems. Non-pharmacological interventions are the first course of action for older people with dementia who are agitated. This article helps nurses to broaden their understanding of agitation, its causes, including trigger factors in the environment and those that nurses may cause. Finally, it summarises evidence on non-pharmacological and pharmacological interventions so that this evidence can be incorporated into person-centred care.

Nursing Older People. 22, 6, 18-25. doi: 10.7748/nop2010.07.22.6.18.c7837

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