5. How do you know that grandmother used to love the doll as a child?
Answers
Answer:
see friend the highlighted points are the correct answer rest all are extra information.
Explanation:
For Rose, dementia brought troubling problems along with memory loss. She was constantly agitated, despite a doctor-prescribed regimen of sedatives. Though irritable, she wasn’t alert. Rose had little quality of life — until her adult daughter brought a doll to her assisted living home. Instead of wandering the halls looking for an exit, Rose carried the doll with her everywhere, visiting other residents in her community with “her granddaughter” and happily changing the doll’s tiny outfits. Her levels of anxiety disappeared to such an extent it was decided she no longer needed her Ativan and hydromorphone. Even when she didn’t have the doll with her, her good mood remained for hours.
“We call it a miracle sometimes,” said John Schmid, co-founder of Best Alzheimer’s Products.
Schmid said he has repeatedly seen how dolls have aided with dementia-related aggression, agitation, and restlessness.
“You won’t change the disease, but you can improve quality of life,” he said.
Still, dolls are not for every patient or every family. Here are nine “dos and don’ts” to consider before giving a doll to your loved one.
hope this helps...