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10 Activities For Seniors With Dementia


Keeping aging loved ones active in hobbies and interests that gave them pleasure in the past is important after the disease diagnosis.

As the number of patients suffering with dementia continues to grow, family caregivers and memory care facilities still struggle with figuring out the best way to properly care for dementia patients while also providing them with the means to enjoy their days.

The more challenging the work of caregiving gets, the easier it becomes to forget to give time to activities that improve quality of life. And staying active can slow down the mental decline of dementia. So these activities can not only improve a dementia patient’s day, but also help them maintain more of their memory and mental capacity for longer.

1. Do Improv

Improv is a type of group comedy that involves making things up on the spot in a way that makes it easy for the other members of your group to do the same. While mostly known as a pastime of young comedians and performers, many seniors with dementia have started to give it a try.

Not only is improv a fun way to spend an hour or two and a good opportunity for socializing, but researchers have also found evidence that it improves the lives of the seniors that give it a go. Improv focuses on living in the moment and going with the flow, which takes the pressure off for people who spend most of their day confused about the lines between the past, present, and future.

2. Listen to and Create Music

Nobody wants to live a life without music. Seniors currently slipping into their memories of earlier times may find it difficult, if not impossible, to figure out how to pull up their favorite tunes on a computer or iPhone. That shouldn’t impede their ability to have music in their lives. Caregivers can make a point to play music for their loved one regularly, and nursing homes can schedule programs that bring in live music or allow residents a committed time for enjoying music they love.

Music therapy is often used to help seniors improve their memories or simply enjoy their life more. Some caregivers specifically seek out songs they know the patient loved in their past, which can inspire fond memories and give them the opportunity to sing along.

3. Do Crafts

Crafts keep your hands busy and your mind focused on doing something creative. If a dementia patient is in the later stages of the disease, you may want to stick with simpler crafts, but you can find many crafts for seniors that aren’t too complicated to do (but also don’t seem too childish).

4. Start Gardening

Gardening is a healthy activity that can get a person outside and focused on something that requires often-enjoyable work and progress. Research suggests it’s good for helping improve the mood of dementia patients.

As an added benefit, it produces healthy, fresh produce – the kind of ingredients doctors are quick to recommend to any senior.

5. Cook or Bake

Like gardening, cooking is an activity that provides both a way to keep busy and a tasty, useful result. You should always make sure that someone’s present when a dementia patient is cooking, so there’s plenty of opportunity to catch potential safety issues like leaving the oven on. But equipping a senior with the proper ingredients and means to put together a delicious meal or dessert, especially one that enjoyed cooking throughout their life before the diagnosis, can leave them with a sense of accomplishment and a feeling that their day was productive.

6. Spend Time With Animals

Animals bring out the best in many of us. Some assisted living facilities have started to invite therapy dogs into the facility to give seniors an opportunity to interact with friendly animals that show them nothing but love. The results are often impressive – dementia patients who have kept to themselves for months suddenly show joy again in the presence of an affectionate animal.

If your loved one is in the early stages of dementia, volunteering at a shelter or visiting with the animals that friends and family members have can be helpful to them. Later along, simply getting them into the same room with a friendly, well-trained dog can make a difference.

7. Put Together Puzzles

Puzzles are fun, challenging, and get your brain working. It’s also possible to work on them for hours without needing to remember what you’ve done before – you only need to focus on finding the fit to the next piece.

You can find puzzles designed with dementia patients in mind, some of them a bit simpler in nature so that they won’t be frustrating to patients, others with images from the past that might be meaningful to them.

8. Play Games

Long, complicated board games like Monopoly might not be a great option for your typical dementia patient, but you can find plenty of games that will still be fun and manageable.

Card games, word games, and bingo are just a few examples that many dementia patients can still tackle and enjoy. And many games provide the added benefit of being a social opportunity for the senior as well.

9. Go On Walks

It’s simple. It’s healthy. And it gets them out of the house. Walks come with lots of opportunities to see and take in new things. Whether it’s noticing the landscaping around your neighborhood, or watching the other people walking around the area as well.

You can shake things up by taking the senior to different areas of town for walks regularly. Seeing all new places and things is a good way to keep life from becoming monotonous.

10. Do Household Chores

It doesn’t sound like fun, but doing chores around the house can serve a useful purpose for dementia patients (and not just in terms of having a cleaner house). That sense of accomplishment we’ve mentioned in relation to a few other activities can definitely come into play each time a senior finishes folding clothes or sweeping a room.

Further, household chores are likely something they’ve been doing their entire life. Keeping up with the good habits of old can help them feel like their life isn’t being taken over by the disease.

This is by no means an exhaustive list. Anything that a senior with dementia loved doing throughout their life that it’s still safe for them to do can be a good activity to work into their days. The most important point to take away is that staying active is important. Whatever form that takes, make sure the dementia patient you know and love is finding ways to participate in life and keep their days full.

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