Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 08, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A6
A 6 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2014 SATURDAY SPECIAL winnipegfreepress. com
D ON de Vlaming hopes people will
be understanding and respectful
of him when the Alzheimer's
disease he was diagnosed with
just before Christmas advances.
" Don't take away my dignity," pleads the
76- year- old Winnipeg man.
De Vlaming knows better than most what
to expect. He ministered to people with
Alzheimer's when he was a chaplain at a
care home.
" I can see myself in the future," said de
Vlaming.
Through no fault of his own, he acknowledges
it will become an increasingly frustrating
and challenging time for his caregivers.
" My actions may become contrary. My
intention is not to hurt but to love and be
loved," he said in an interview after a recent
Alzheimer Society seminar in Winnipeg.
There, he made an emotional plea to the
crowd of loved ones, caregivers and medical
professionals to remember and respect the
person afflicted by the dementia.
" Regardless of how I am, I can still be
loved - and I need it."
He said he's fortunate to have a loving
family - wife Sylvia and grown sons Jan,
25, and Horace, 20. Not everyone with
dementia does, and he's concerned about
" herding people away in little nooks" and
isolating them.
With an aging population of baby boomers, a growing
number of Manitobans like de Vlaming are diagnosed
with dementia every year. A boom in dementia
cases in Manitoba is expected 25 years from now.
Today, more than 20,000 Manitobans have Alzheimer's
disease or another form of dementia, with
close to 4,400 new cases of dementia reported in
the province last year. By 2038, if nothing changes,
there will be 34,000 Manitobans with dementia and
the Alzheimer Society of Manitoba is predicting a
" crisis."
M ANITOBANS recently caught a glimpse of
what happens when families and the system
can no longer handle dementia's demands.
An inquest into the 2011 death of care- home resident
Frank Alexander, 87, began Jan. 20 and raised questions
about whether adequate care is available to the
most vulnerable among us.
Alexander died after being pushed to the floor
by Alzheimer sufferer and care- home resident Joe
McLeod, 70. Months earlier, McLeod was moved to
Parkview Place from the Winnipeg Remand Centre
where he was being held for assaulting his wife.
McLeod's family was afraid to take him and he was
admitted to the downtown care home.
There, in the main- floor recreation area where
a lone staff member was running a bingo game,
McLeod pushed Alexander, who fell backwards to the
floor and died days later from head trauma.
The families of both men at the inquest said they
felt the system failed them.
The union representing Manitoba care- home workers
says more staff is needed to care for residents.
" While the number of residents in care is increasing
in the province, the staffing numbers are
generally staying the same, not to mention staffing
shortages," said David Jacks, with the Canadian
Union of Public Employees, who added members
have reported employers not replacing workers if
they call in sick.
" It would be great not to be working short, because
you could spend more time with the residents," said
health - care aide Sandra Makwich, who's worked
at a personal care home for 25 years. " You just do
not have the time to say ' Let's go look at your photo
album for a minute.' It is a major, major issue and it
affects every aspect of care and that includes human
touch and human care."
There needs to be " all hands on deck" to ensure the
safety of residents and staff, she added. " On a daily
basis you're either slapped at, yelled at or sworn at.
It's a hard job."
At the inquest into Alexander's death, geriatric
psychiatrist Dr. Barry Campbell testified patients in
a personal care home have a 10 per cent chance of
being assaulted by another resident. For staff, that
number is much higher, he said.
" They're expecting to be assaulted."
M AKWICH, CUPE Local 4572 president, said
workers are trained in non- violent crisis
intervention and receive " refresher" courses.
They also take the PIECES program ( Physical,
Intellectual, Emotional, Capabilities, Environment
and Social), which teaches caregivers how to see the
whole person behind the disease so they can understand
the root of their difficult behaviour and find
creative solutions to managing dementia behaviours.
" When you get to know residents very well, you
can sometimes divert the aggression - it all depends
on what frame of mind they're in," said Makwich.
If staff don't have the time to get to know residents,
that training won't do much good, she said.
She recalled an incident where a patient wandered
up and down the halls saying ' Where's my son?
where's my son?'
It wasn't until the woman was in palliative care
staff learned she was a concentration camp survivor
whose son was lost there.
" Had we known this, it would've explained a lot
more. We care for our residents deeply and try to do
the best job we can," she said.
" Put yourself in their position. How would you
want to be treated or your parents treated? I
wouldn't want my mom in a home where they're
short- staffed and she just sits all day," added Makwich,
whose lucid 89- year- old mother is visiting her
from B. C.
The Alzheimer Society said it is working with the
province to renew its 2002 Strategy for Alzheimer
Disease and Related Dementias in Manitoba.
" You can have wonderful strategy, but if it's not
funded, it's no good to anyone," said Wendy Schettler,
executive director of the Alzheimer Society of
Manitoba. The province says it knows more personal
care home beds are needed and is working on it,
particularly making more room for those who need
special care.
Last August, a new care home in Niverville opened
that includes a special- care unit for residents with
more aggressive behaviours often caused by dementia.
New personal care homes in Morden and Lac du
Bonnet are in development, a government spokeswoman
said in an email.
In 2015, construction is set to begin on 200 new
personal care home beds in Winnipeg with specialized
spaces for residents with complex behavioural
issues. The province is also looking at whether
existing personal care home beds could be " enhanced"
for residents with " complex needs," the
spokeswoman said.
For now, Winnipeg has nearly 400 beds for residents
whose care needs require a protected environment,
with around 10 per cent for those with complex
behavioural needs, the province said.
Schettler said one of the biggest needs is for training
of caregivers and staff. Her organization is working
with the province to provide PIECES training to
better respond to Alzheimer's patients.
When asked what to do with those who are aggressive,
Schettler bristles.
" Imagine yourself sitting in your home quietly
watching TV and somebody walked into your home
and started taking off your clothes and said ' You're
taking a bath?' " Schettler asked. Yelling or trying to
fight off the molester would be considered a reasonable
response if you don't recognize your caregiver.
The aggressive behaviour is usually a response to
feeling threatened, she said.
Schettler hopes the inquest into the death of Alexander
spurs the health- care system to do what needs
to be done.
" We think this is a tragedy for the families, but
we're hoping the inquest will identify some of the
gaps in the system... and how some of the decision
points along the way could've been different. We're
really hopeful the inquest will come out with some
more insight and make recommendations."
carol. sanders@ freepress. mb. ca
Aging
with
dignity
The number of
dementia cases will
explode in the future;
many fear staffing
and resources
won't keep pace
By Carol Sanders
MELISSA TAIT / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Don de Vlaming and his wife, Sylvia. He says he's fortunate to have a loving family to help him navigate through dementia struggles. Many patients aren't so lucky.
RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
' I wouldn't want my mom in a home where
they're short- staffed and she just sits all day'
- health- care aide Sandra Makwich, with her 89- year- old mother
WHAT IT IS,
WHAT IT COSTS
Alzheimer's disease is a form of
dementia.
The progressive, degenerative
brain disease results in symptoms
including memory loss, difficulty
with day- to- day tasks and changes
in mood and behaviour.
The brain changes do not affect
the person's ability to appreciate,
respond to and experience feelings
such as joy, anger, love or sadness.
The number of Alzheimer's sufferers
in Manitoba is on track to
double in a generation, potentially
overwhelming families, the healthcare
system and the economy.
The economic cost of dementia
in Manitoba is $ 885 million a year
and that will rise to $ 4.4 billion by
2038.
Caregivers in Manitoba now
spend more than nine million hours
annually of informal, unpaid care.
By 2038, those hours are expected
to exceed 22 million. Nationally,
Canadians spend 231 million hours
on informal care. By 2038, it will
reach 756 million hours.
- source: Alzheimer Society
of Manitoba
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