Clinicians and
carers working with people with dementia would be familiar with approaches such
as reminiscence therapy, but may be less au fait with the use of creative
storytelling.
The creative storytelling approaches used encourage people with dementia to tell stories based on a picture or photo. One of the important aspects of this technique, is that there is no “right or wrong”. Indeed this method allows and welcomes storytelling of all types – including made up stories.
The benefits
that clinicians using this approach noted included:
·
An
opportunity for people with dementia to engage in conversation
·
An
opportunity for verbal expression not bound by “rules”
·
Individuals
were observed to have increased confidence, quality of life and positively
altered behavior
The TimeSlips
approach by Basting is a more structured format. Researchers from the
University of Missouri found that participation in the TimeSlips storytelling
programme improved communication between patients with Alzheimer’s Disease and
had a generally positive effect on patients. Working in 20 care homes, researchers
studied the effect of storytelling among residents with Alzheimers. Using a
method developed by the TimeSlips Creative Storytelling Project, residents were
encouraged to tell stories inspired by photographs. Working as a group,
patients created a narrative inspired by the picture. The method replaces the
pressure to remember with encouragement to imagine.
In examples
where it was used in care homes, the whole community was reported to benefit.
Read more about one particular study here .
Speechmark
ColorCards lend themselves nicely to this approach – From Everyday Objects to What Can You See? With these ColorCards, photo based stimuli, it able's you to
make your own storytelling aids in the care home; images that provoke
discussion or images from a particular time in that person’s history.
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