Book: Introduction
5. Later stage dementia - stage 3
In this third and final stage,
the person has severe impairment and needs total, 24 hour care. The person may:
· Lose their ability to understand or use speech
· Need help with eating, washing, bathing, toileting and dressing (these are sometimes called the Activities of Daily Living)
· Be disturbed at night
· Be restless
· Show little or no recognition of family and friends
· Have difficulty walking, eventually perhaps becoming confined to a chair
· Have permanent immobility, and in the final weeks or months the person will be bedridden.
· Be incontinent
It’s important to remember that some abilities remain throughout all stages. The person still keeps their sense of touch and hearing, smell and their ability to respond to emotion.
A person in the later stages of dementia may have symptoms that suggest that they are close to death, but actually live with these symptoms for many months.