Adviser Spring 2017 Vol 1 | Page 30

Creating a Dementia-Friendly Memory Care Facility (Continued) • Decrease visibility of doors that residents should not use, such as utility rooms or staff spaces. If possible, have exit doors not intended for resident use situated parallel to the hallway so they are less visible, rather than at the end of the hallway. Provide appropriate physical support • Install handrails (or a ledge to lean on) in the hallways and grab-bars in the bathrooms. • Minimize obstacles in hallways. • Make sure floors are not slippery. • Provide gradual transitions when changing flooring materials (hard surface to carpeting) to minimize falls, and provide handrails or other support in these areas. • Minimize sharp color contrasts in flooring, and avoid borders and strong, busy patterns, which can be visually challenging to someone with dementia. • Install motion detectors in rooms of residents prone to falls. Adjust the amount of stimulation People with dementia have a decreased ability to deal with multiple and competing stimuli and may be overwhelmed when there is too much activity. Rather than simply reducing all forms of stimulation, focus on minimizing those sources of stimulation that have a negative impact on residents. Care settings for people with dementia should provide positive, therapeutic stimuli. Acoustic stimulation • Eliminate overhead public address systems. • Avoid playing music throughout the facility. • Minimize noise from necessary institutional support systems, such as ice makers, carts and pill-crushers. • Consider policies regarding caregiving staff talking loudly to each other. • Regulate the amount of noise generated by group activities; activity rooms should have doors that can be closed or left open. (Continued) 29 Adviser a publication of LeadingAge New York | Spring 2017