Tips For Treating Pick's Disease
Nursing Care

Appropriate nursing care is essential to manage the later stages of Pick's disease. Patients with this form of dementia will need assistance with personal hygiene, self-care, and daily tasks such as dressing, brushing teeth, cooking, and eating meals. They may become confused and disorientated to such a degree that they cannot remember where they are, which can be frightening for the patient and their family. While home health nurses and in-home caregivers may be able to provide suitable assistance in the early stages of the illness, the disease will eventually progress to the point twenty-four-hour care is needed. At this stage, the patient is often moved to a specialist nursing home with a dementia care or memory care facility. Patients who have been recently diagnosed with Pick's disease should discuss living wills, advance directives, power of attorney, and other legal and financial matters with their family members as soon as possible. Patients and their families may also wish to search for home health care aides and research nursing facilities soon after receiving a diagnosis.
Keep reading now for more information on how to treat Pick's disease.