Understanding Dementia in the Elderly

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Delirium, Depression, and Dementia are some of the most common psychological diagnoses in the elderly today. The three D’s are difficult to differentiate between in older adults because they overlap with each other and can all exist in the same patient at once. Delirium, Dementia, and Depression all affect the elderly’s quality of life and often increase the risks for one another (Downing, Caprio & Lyness, 2013). For the purpose of this paper I will be focusing primarily on the diagnosis of Dementia, the prevention, and nursing measures associated with it, but first I would like to differentiate between Delirium and Depression because Dementia is often associated with the two in the older adult population.
Delirium is a cognitive disorder that alters the patients’ level of consciousness, generally as an acute onset, impairs memory, fluctuations in behavior, produces disorganized thinking, and perceptual disturbances such as hallucinations (Downing, Caprio & Lyness, 2013). In order to diagnose and monitor Delirium a confusion assessment method (CAM) is used to measure the symptoms of ...

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