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Do you know if pain is a factor with your mother? Does she have a

hard time hearing? My mother will sometimes be seen as aggressive

if a staff member approaches her without her knowledge and tries to

move her or dress/undress her. It's a defensive movement because

she has no comprehension of this unexpected contact.

I'm certain others on the list will have other suggestions but if

this is out of character for your mother normally, it might be her

altered perception of life's activities.

Best wishes,

Lynn in Florida

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

>

> hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has

been in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had

bouts of aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she

seems to be this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD

sufferer, has anyone out there had to deal with this along the way,

maybe you know of something that could help? kind regards x

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Many times they will be aggressive because of pain or other uncomfortibler

feelings.Can she speak whats bothering her?Is she able to comunicate?Mom cant

really comunicate with many people anymore but Im tuned in to her a little

better, but there was a time when some of her crying spells came from not being

able to convey what she needs or wants.Also Ive seen in nursing homes as a cna

that many times a pain that one cant express can make them very agitated and

sometimes aggressive.Does your mum have anything for the anxiety?Seroquel has

helped my mom a great deal.I hope your able to find out more.Heartfelt best

Ron

aggressiveness

hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has been

in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had bouts of

aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to be

this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you know of

something that could help? kind regards x

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  • 2 weeks later...

L,

I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is because you may have

some staff that don't understand their fears. They need time to adjust to

whatever staff wants to do next. And most staff just are in a hurry.

IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs to do next, she

will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom is afraid, and you need to

give her some time. The ones that learned what I meant, usually did better.

Hope this helps.

Donna R

Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years and 4th year in

a nh.

She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

aggressiveness

hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has been

in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had bouts of

aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to be

this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you know of

something that could help? kind regards x

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L,

I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is because you may have

some staff that don't understand their fears. They need time to adjust to

whatever staff wants to do next. And most staff just are in a hurry.

IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs to do next, she

will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom is afraid, and you need to

give her some time. The ones that learned what I meant, usually did better.

Hope this helps.

Donna R

Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years and 4th year in

a nh.

She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

aggressiveness

hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has been

in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had bouts of

aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to be

this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you know of

something that could help? kind regards x

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L,

I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is because you may have

some staff that don't understand their fears. They need time to adjust to

whatever staff wants to do next. And most staff just are in a hurry.

IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs to do next, she

will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom is afraid, and you need to

give her some time. The ones that learned what I meant, usually did better.

Hope this helps.

Donna R

Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years and 4th year in

a nh.

She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

aggressiveness

hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has been

in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had bouts of

aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to be

this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you know of

something that could help? kind regards x

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Thank you,I have just been having similar issues with my moms. I

think that that may work for me. Not all of my moms caretakers

understand her. So again I thank you,

R

>

> L,

>

> I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

>

> I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is

because you may have some staff that don't understand their fears.

They need time to adjust to whatever staff wants to do next. And

most staff just are in a hurry.

>

> IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs

to do next, she will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom

is afraid, and you need to give her some time. The ones that

learned what I meant, usually did better.

>

> Hope this helps.

>

> Donna R

>

> Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years

and 4th year in a nh.

> She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

>

>

> aggressiveness

>

> hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has

been

> in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had

bouts of

> aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to

be

> this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

> anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you

know of

> something that could help? kind regards x

>

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

Thank you,I have just been having similar issues with my moms. I

think that that may work for me. Not all of my moms caretakers

understand her. So again I thank you,

R

>

> L,

>

> I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

>

> I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is

because you may have some staff that don't understand their fears.

They need time to adjust to whatever staff wants to do next. And

most staff just are in a hurry.

>

> IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs

to do next, she will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom

is afraid, and you need to give her some time. The ones that

learned what I meant, usually did better.

>

> Hope this helps.

>

> Donna R

>

> Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years

and 4th year in a nh.

> She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

>

>

> aggressiveness

>

> hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has

been

> in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had

bouts of

> aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to

be

> this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

> anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you

know of

> something that could help? kind regards x

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you,I have just been having similar issues with my moms. I

think that that may work for me. Not all of my moms caretakers

understand her. So again I thank you,

R

>

> L,

>

> I saved this message and am just finding it to reply to again.

>

> I think most of the time when our LOs are aggressive, it is

because you may have some staff that don't understand their fears.

They need time to adjust to whatever staff wants to do next. And

most staff just are in a hurry.

>

> IF they can give your Mom time to prepare for whatever she needs

to do next, she will probably do better. I use to tell staff, Mom

is afraid, and you need to give her some time. The ones that

learned what I meant, usually did better.

>

> Hope this helps.

>

> Donna R

>

> Caregave for Mom (after I brought her from WI to MI) for 3 years

and 4th year in a nh.

> She was almost 89 when she died in '02. No dx other than mine.

>

>

> aggressiveness

>

> hello, my mum has suffered with LBD for about 4 years now, she has

been

> in a nursing home for the last few months, she has always had

bouts of

> aggressive behaviour, both physical and verbal, but she seems to

be

> this way all the time now, is this normal for an LBD sufferer, has

> anyone out there had to deal with this along the way, maybe you

know of

> something that could help? kind regards x

>

>

>

>

>

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Hi! What Donna says is true -same thing happened with my husband. He had told

me, when he could still talk, to allow some time after I said something for him

to " digest it " and answer or do what I was asking. And after he couldn't talk, I

could see that agitation with other people who didn't understand what he wanted

to express. Brainwash every person who deals with your LO about it. With LBD,

PATIENCE is of utmost importance.

Love,

Raquel

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