Alzheimer's Therapists in Moose Jaw, SK
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Frequently Asked Questions About Alzheimer's
How can therapy help when someone has Alzheimer's disease or dementia?
Therapy does not slow or reverse cognitive decline, but it plays a meaningful role for both the person living with dementia and those around them. In early-stage dementia, counselling helps the individual process the emotional impact of diagnosis, prepare advance care plans while capacity remains, and adapt to changes in independence. It can also address depression and anxiety, which are common and treatable in early dementia. Approaches such as reminiscence therapy and cognitive stimulation therapy have evidence for improving quality of life in mild to moderate stages.
Who benefits from therapy in relation to Alzheimer's?
Therapy benefits three distinct groups: the person living with dementia (particularly in early to mid stages), family members navigating the caregiving role, and adult children or spouses facing grief, burnout, and difficult decisions about care. Many therapists who specialize in this area see all three groups — sometimes separately, sometimes together — depending on needs and stage of illness.
What does counselling for family caregivers of someone with dementia involve?
Caregiver counselling addresses grief (anticipatory loss is one of dementia's most painful features — mourning the person while they are still alive), stress and burnout, guilt, anger, and the logistical and relational challenges of the caregiving role. It also helps caregivers navigate family conflict about care decisions, plan for transitions when home care is no longer safe, and maintain their own health and relationships throughout the long arc of the illness.
What is anticipatory grief in the context of dementia?
Anticipatory grief is the experience of grieving losses that are ongoing or expected but not yet complete. With dementia, family members often begin grieving long before physical death — mourning the loss of the relationship they knew, the person's personality and memories, and the losses still to come. This form of grief is frequently invisible to others who do not recognize it as "real" loss while the person is still alive. Therapy provides a space where the full reality of anticipatory grief is acknowledged and supported.
What therapy approaches are used for dementia support?
For the person with dementia, reminiscence therapy (using memories, photographs, and life history to affirm identity) and validation therapy (meeting the person in their emotional reality) are used in mild to moderate stages. Cognitive stimulation therapy is an evidence-based group intervention for quality of life. For caregivers, CBT and grief-focused therapies have strong evidence. Searching Theralist with the Alzheimer's or caregiver filter will show therapists experienced with dementia-related concerns in your area.