If you're reading this because someone you love has just been diagnosed with dementia or you're starting to suspect something is wrong — first, breathe. You're not behind. Most families arrive at this conversation later than they should, and that's normal. Now is the right time to start learning.
This is a starter guide. It's not exhaustive, and it's not medical advice. It's an honest summary of what you'll likely need to know in the months ahead, written by people who care for residents at every stage of dementia.
The early signs that might bring you here
Dementia rarely announces itself. It accumulates. Most families notice in retrospect:
- Repeating the same question multiple times in a single conversation
- Misplacing things in unusual places (keys in the freezer, wallet in the laundry)
- Confusion about time, place, or recent events
- Difficulty managing money, medications, or appointments
- Personality changes — withdrawal, irritability, or uncharacteristic anxiety
- Trouble with familiar tasks — cooking a recipe they've made for decades
- Getting lost on familiar routes
None of these alone means dementia. Many have other causes — medication side effects, sleep problems, depression, infection, thyroid issues. That's why the first step is a thorough medical evaluation.
What to do first: get a real diagnosis
Don't try to figure this out alone. The first thing to do is get your loved one to their primary care physician for a cognitive assessment. Likely steps:
- A basic cognitive screening (a few questions and tasks)
- Bloodwork to rule out reversible causes
- Possibly imaging (CT or MRI of the brain)
- Referral to a neurologist or geriatrician for a full workup
This process can take months. Push through it. A real diagnosis affects everything that follows — type of care, prognosis, planning. Don't skip it.
The major types of dementia
The word "dementia" is an umbrella. Underneath are several different conditions with different patterns and trajectories:
- Alzheimer's disease — the most common (60-70% of cases). Gradual memory loss, particularly recent events. Progresses slowly over many years.
- Vascular dementia — caused by strokes or reduced blood flow. Often progresses in steps, with sudden changes followed by plateaus.
- Lewy body dementia — features visual hallucinations, motor symptoms similar to Parkinson's, and fluctuating cognition.
- Frontotemporal dementia — affects personality and behavior more than memory in early stages. Tends to occur at younger ages.
- Mixed dementia — many older adults have features of more than one type.
The type matters because it predicts what kind of care will work best and what behaviors to expect.
The general stages
Most dementias progress through roughly three stages, though timing varies enormously:
Early stage (1-3 years): The person can still live mostly independently. They may need reminders, help with finances, and a safer environment. Driving usually needs to stop. This stage is often emotionally hardest because awareness is preserved — your loved one knows something is wrong.
Middle stage (2-10 years): The longest stage. Substantial help with daily living becomes necessary. Behaviors emerge — wandering, repetition, sundowning, sometimes aggression. Most families can no longer manage at home in this stage; this is when residential care becomes essential.
Late stage (1-3 years): Full assistance with all daily living. Speech may diminish or disappear. Mobility declines. Hospice eventually becomes appropriate.
When to consider residential memory care
The answer is rarely obvious, but signs include:
- Your loved one is no longer safe alone, even with daily check-ins
- The primary caregiver is exhausted, depressed, or burning out
- Behaviors have escalated beyond what family can manage (aggression, wandering, sleep reversal)
- Medical needs are exceeding what's practical at home
- Quality of life — for both the person with dementia and their caregivers — is declining
Many families wait too long. The cost of waiting is usually paid by the family caregiver's health and the resident's escalating distress. Earlier transitions are often gentler — for everyone.
What to look for in a memory care home
Not all homes that say they offer "memory care" actually do it well. The questions to ask:
- What's your training in dementia care? Look for specific approaches — validation therapy, person-centered care, dementia-specific behavioral support training.
- How do you handle agitation, wandering, and sundowning? The answer should focus on environmental and relational interventions — not chemical restraint or isolation.
- What's the caregiver consistency like? For dementia, the same faces every day matter enormously.
- How do you communicate with families? Regular updates, photos, and openness matter — especially in middle and late stages when your loved one can't tell you about their day.
- Will you adapt to my loved one's preferences and history? Music, food, faith, language, family — all matter.
- What happens if behavior becomes too challenging? A good home tries multiple interventions before considering discharge. A bad one moves to discharge quickly.
Small homes vs. large facilities
This is a real choice. Large memory care facilities have more resources, often more activities, and typically more polished marketing. They also have more residents, more turnover, and less individualized care.
Small adult family homes (six residents or fewer) offer the opposite: less institutional, more individualized, more consistent caregivers. For many people with dementia, especially those who are introverts or who have advanced cognitive impairment, the smaller environment is dramatically less overwhelming.
Visit both. Trust what your loved one (and your gut) responds to.
What family members can do
You will want to "do something" through every stage. Here's what helps:
- Visit often, even when your loved one doesn't seem to recognize you. They feel your presence even when memory fails.
- Bring familiar objects — photos, music, a quilt from home.
- Communicate with caregivers about what your loved one was like before — favorite songs, foods, stories. The more they know, the better they can connect.
- Take care of yourself. Caregiver burnout is real even when your loved one is in care. You'll be needed for a long time.
- Join a family support group. The Alzheimer's Association offers them in person and online.
What to expect emotionally
Dementia care is grief in slow motion. You'll grieve the person before they die, often many times over, as different parts of them slip away. This is called anticipatory grief and it's normal.
You'll also experience moments of unexpected sweetness — a song that brings recognition back for a few minutes, a sudden lucid sentence, a hand reaching for yours. These moments are real even when they don't last.
Both feelings — grief and grace — can coexist. They will, often. Be patient with yourself.
Final thought
Memory care is one of the most demanding kinds of caregiving. The fact that you're reading articles like this one means you're trying to do it well. That matters more than you know.
At Better Life, we specialize in memory care. If you'd like to talk through your specific situation — even just to understand options — we'd be glad to. Get in touch or read about our memory care approach.