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Tailor
Things for the Elderly
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Individualized programs are the best way to make nursing home
residents feel truly at home, says a geriatrics expert at the
Saint Louis University School of Medicine.
Research by Dr. William Banks suggests
that one-size-fits-all programs -- games, pet interaction, music
therapies, holiday celebrations -- don't necessarily make nursing
home life more enjoyable for everyone. What one person loves,
another may hate.
His findings appear in the current
issue of Geriatrics and Aging.
One of Banks' studies examined
whether visits by dogs and other animals -- called animal-assisted
therapy -- makes nursing home residents feel less lonely. It does,
but only for people who like animals.
For people who don't like animals,
forcing this type of therapy on them would hardly make living
in the nursing home more pleasant.
In the same way, people who love
music would be soothed and fulfilled taking part in music therapy.
However, people who dislike music would find that form of therapy
more punishment than pleasure.
Banks' research also suggests that
more isn't necessarily better. Even the nursing home residents
who loved dogs felt overwhelmed by multiple animal therapy sessions
each week. Banks found that a single 30-minute animal therapy
session a week was sufficient to combat loneliness in nursing
home residents.
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