A glass-half-full look at Alzheimers that reveals how to connect with someone through the fog of the disease.
As many as five million Americans are living with Alzheimers. The popular perception of the disease is that people who receive an Alzheimers diagnosis are lost to themselves and to those who love themand that they have no future. But as John Zeisel, an innovator in nonpharmacological approaches to treating Alzheimers, makes clear in this book, this view is wrong. The disease often lasts ten to fifteen yearsa time span that definitely constitutes a future. In Im Still Here, Zeisel shows that during the course of Alzheimers, caregivers can have a vibrant and meaningful relationship with people who have the disease.
Im Still Here focuses on connecting with individuals with Alzheimers through their abilities that dont diminish with time, such as understanding music, art, facial expressions, and touch. Zeisel demonstrates that people who have the disease are highly creative and emotionally intelligent. By harnessing these capacities, and by using other approaches to treatmentsuch as building memory cues into their living environment, which encourages independent movement and helps eliminate sources of frustrationits possible to offer them a quality life with connection to others and to the world.
As many as five million Americans are living with Alzheimers. The popular perception of the disease is that people who receive an Alzheimers diagnosis are lost to themselves and to those who love themand that they have no future. But as John Zeisel, an innovator in nonpharmacological approaches to treating Alzheimers, makes clear in this book, this view is wrong. The disease often lasts ten to fifteen yearsa time span that definitely constitutes a future. In Im Still Here, Zeisel shows that during the course of Alzheimers, caregivers can have a vibrant and meaningful relationship with people who have the disease.
Im Still Here focuses on connecting with individuals with Alzheimers through their abilities that dont diminish with time, such as understanding music, art, facial expressions, and touch. Zeisel demonstrates that people who have the disease are highly creative and emotionally intelligent. By harnessing these capacities, and by using other approaches to treatmentsuch as building memory cues into their living environment, which encourages independent movement and helps eliminate sources of frustrationits possible to offer them a quality life with connection to others and to the world.





