By Valerie Greco
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April 6, 2021
I have worked in healthcare since I was sixteen years old, and I was visiting nursing homes since I was a child. My mom was a geriatric nurse and I have many hours visiting the elderly. We grew up in a multigenerational family, where I knew my great grandparents throughout my teenage years. Needless to say, I was raised to not only respect my elders but also love and revere them. So, when I hear “room 104 needs help” or “that dementia patient” my heart sinks a little. Not because there is malice behind the voice but because our healthcare system may have contributed to these missteps. In the rush, have we reduced patients down to a nameless and faceless diagnoses? Does calling someone “my dementia patient” define who they really are? I am not without fault in this too. I have mistakenly called someone by their diagnosis in conversation or in a teaching. But I know we can do better as healthcare workers and as a society. When I see a person with dementia, I see someone’s loved one, grandparent, devoted spouse, mother, father, best friend, coworker, scientist, home maker, engineer, hair stylist, gardener, farmer, artist, sister, brother, aunt, uncle, attorney, professor, daughter, son, pastor, steel worker, dreamer, lover. Even though a person’s mind may be ravished by this disease, it does not negate that they were contributors to the momentum of our society. They were movers and shakers, hustling to help their families. My resolve is to stop and pay attention; give pause out of true honor and respect for what each person has given to the world. And even if they are unable to respond back with a “thanks”, I can still hear their heart speak back a resounding “thanks- for I am not dementia. I am a human being .” My vision is to have products that still assist in people maintaining their highest functional level possible. The goal behind my visual aid stickers is to facilitate independence and reduce anxiety in people struggling with cognitive impairments. Let’s keep advocating they maintain all that they have. Let’s keep the humanity in their being. Click here to see my visual aid stickers .