Nihon Essay Essay Dementias not a disease, Shuji Okuno says

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Japanese title: 新書 日本エッセイ・随筆 認知症は病気ではない / 奥野修司
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Item number: BQ117321
Released date: 18 Oct 2024

Product description ※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.

According to a government estimate, there will be about 7 million people with dementia in 2025, with about 20 percent of people aged 65 and over suffering from the disease. There is nothing more to avoid than being declared demented in this age, because there is a belief that "if you become demented, you don't know anything." Shuji Okuno, a non-fiction writer who has covered many demented people for many years, says you have to give up that old view of the disease. People with dementia have feelings similar to us, and laugh when they are comfortable, and feel sad and angry when they are hurt. Many people are afraid of losing their memories. Is Alzheimer's disease, which accounts for about 60 percent of all demented people and 80 to 90 percent of all demented people, is a disease? "Masaaki Matsushita, a professor emeritus at the University of Tokyo and an authority on geriatric psychiatry, says" there is no qualitative difference between the brains of people with normal aging and those of people with Alzheimer's disease, is a aging phenomenon of the brain. "" There is no qualitative difference between the brains of people with normal aging and those of people with Alzheimer's disease, "which accounts for about 60 percent of all demented people, and 80 to 90 percent of all demented people, is a disease?" "There is no qualitative difference between the brains of people with normal aging and those of people with Alzheimer's disease," he said. "There is no qualitative difference between the brains of people with normal aging and those of The reason why people are afraid of the disease is probably because their memories are disappearing.
In fact, people with the disease are also afraid of their own memory loss and feeling anxious.
What do they feel when they are told by their family members, such as" Be firm "?
By listening to the voice of the person concerned and reading the message, we get to know the feeling.
Chapter 3 : Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms for Dementia is not a symptom of a disease
Family members who take care of a person with the disease suffer from" Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms for Dementia "such as verbal abuse, assault, wandering, and delusion caused by cognitive decline.
Why do they take this action?
In the background, there were circumstances and feelings of each person concerned.
Chapter 4 : What Families Can Do
Although support for people with the disease is mainly provided by their family members, it is not uncommon for their feelings to pass through each other.
Chapter 4 : What Families Can Do
With the advice of medical and care specialists, there are many examples of how family members interact with each other and how they think about each other.
With the advice of medical and care specialists, there are many examples of how family members interact with each other and how they think about each other.
With the advice of medical and care specialists, there are many examples of how family members interact with each Fujinomiya City age-related alterations Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms for Dementia Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms for Dementia