The experience of attending group sessions may often serve to ‘awaken’ people when their families feel that they are becoming unreachable. Activities are playful, non threatening and multi sensory. Crucially in the later stages of the illness it is important to understand and work with those cognitive abilities which are still evident.
Activities include:
● Games such as ball catching and particularly keeping a balloon in the air which elicits an instinctive response.
● Music - delivered if necessary through headphones.
● Activities to stimulate touch and taste.
● Dancing - even those who have never danced will respond to both rhythm and the sense of being part of a group. There is no sense of judgement just togetherness.
● Singing - people whose speech has become limited will often hear a familiar song, remember the words and be able to join in. Singing in a group is a shared experience and the voices of others around them serve as a prompt. Clapping at the end of a song is in itself a form of mental stimulation.
● iPad apps which provide visual stimulation.