Funny & Cute Things Our Demented Patients Say

The intended purpose of this article is to use the written word to capture some lighthearted memories and recollections about the funny and sometimes cute statements that my demented patients have made over the years. Working with the demented elderly population can be interesting. Specialties Geriatric Article

Anyone who works around the demented elderly population can attest to the fact that they sometimes say the darndest things.

Mr. Rider is a pseudonym for the slightly plump octogenarian nursing home resident who had some cognitive decline due to vascular dementia. Anyhow, I walked into his room with his breakfast tray one weekend morning about six years ago. I naturally assumed he would eat his food after I had gotten finished setting up the tray. After all, this guy was one who never missed any meals.

"I don't want to eat this morning," he earnestly tells me. "I'm trying to lose some weight."

I was taken aback by his response because Mr. Rider was not the type of man who ever worried about maintaining his figure. However, after a few more attempts to offer him the tray, he continued to refuse, so I respected his desire to 'trim down.'

Ms. Lucinda is a pseudonym for the petite septuagenarian nursing home resident who was afflicted with middle-stage Alzheimer's disease. Nursing staff had to be very careful with the manner in which they approached her because she would take a swing at any caregiver who made one wrong move. In addition to punching the person, she would give them a verbal lashing with vulgarities that were on the same level as a drunken sailor.

I had just given her a bolus g-tube feeding one night approximately four years ago. Before I left the room, she studied me from head to toe and declared, "You're getting too fat, girl!"

Her eyes suddenly shift to my round backside. She examines me for a few more seconds and nods her head in agreement before saying, "Yes, girl. You're getting fat! You need to stop pigging out!"

Anne is a pseudomyn for the frail nonagenarian nursing home resident whom I met in early 2006 at my very first nursing job. She had middle-stage Alzheimer's disease and other psychiatric issues. I was a brand new nurse back then, and had learned in nursing school to perform 'reality orientation' when dealing with disoriented patients.

She would ask me every 30 minutes, "How do I get to the fourteenth floor?"

My newbie response: "This building has no fourteenth floor. It only has one floor. You're in the right place."

Of course, she was never happy with my answer and would furiously roll around the building in her little wheelchair until she could locate anyone else who would direct her to the nonexistent elevator or the staircase that would lead to the fourteenth floor.

Nowadays I avoid reality orientation like the plague if the patient has middle-stage or end-stage dementia. Therapeutic fibbing seems to work well with these patients and causes them the least amount of emotional turmoil.

So, have any of your past or present demented patients said anything that was too funny or so cute? Feel free to share!

Specializes in Med/Surge, Psych, LTC, Home Health.

The other night I went into one of my rt's room to flush her G tube.

She looked at me and smiled and said "HIIIIIII! Yer sexy!!" =)

I laughed and then said "I like your babies" (she has these two baby

dolls that she cuddles and sleeps with.

She said "Thank you.... they're sexy TOO!" :lol2:

Specializes in ICU.
I had a guy once who was dead set he was the king of some country. He kept ripping his tele box off until I told him it was the medal his queen gave him for conquering the heathens. He then had to show it off to everyone that came in he room proclaiming he was a great king.

Also had another person refuse to go to bed because then us nurses would just have a "screw party"

Sometimes it is just better and more fun to play into the peoples world.

OMG thats hilarious.

Specializes in allergy and asthma, urgent care.

I was assigned to an elderly gentleman with dementia in my first med-surg clinical. I'd go in to check on him, and he would take my hand and say "what is it about me that attracts you so?" He was so sweet, and so in his own reality that I just went along with it.

Specializes in Labor & Delivery, Med-surg.

One day I was called to the dining room of the nursing home by the Care Aid to "deliver a baby". An elderly woman with dementia was lying in her reclining wheelchair yelling "Fred, Fred call a cab, I'm going to have a baby! It's coming, the heads coming! Fred HURRY, get that cab!" Funny because I use to work in Maternity.

We have a very demented lady who wanders throughout the unit, sometimes dusting things, sometimes carrying her sweater. Mostly, she is pleasant but sometimes has trouble with lower back pain. Because she speaks in "word salad," we have to really listen and watch her to be able to get her meaning. One day, as I was standing at the nurses' station, I saw her approach me with a very distressed look. I asked her what was wrong. She looked straight at me and declared, "My angel is flongled!" When I stood back and watched her as she walked away, I noticed that she was more bent over than usual and her hand was on her lower back. I went to the med nurse and asked her to medicate this resident for pain. An hour later, she had straightened up and was smiling as she wandered. So sometimes these demented residents are really trying to tell us something-we just need to learn to listen better!

Specializes in Labor & Delivery, Med-surg.

An elderly doctor in the nursing home with dementia coming to the nursing station to order x-rays and lab tests on a fellow patient.

Specializes in Labor & Delivery, Med-surg.

One resident calling out “Help me, help me” all evening, every evening for hours. When asked why he did this he said, “Just to see if anyone is home or if any of those teenagers are around”, referring to the care staff!

One resident called his daughter from the nursing home saying, “I’ve been sitting here at the bus stop for hours and the bus doesn't come”

this happened to a fellow nurse: an elderly diabetic patient had just gotten a skin tear and said "well, let's not let this blood go to waste. got a test strip handy?"

One night two aides and I were struggling to change the brief of a very demented patient. He was little for an old man, but fought us all the way. As we finally managed to get him clean and dry, he looked me in the eye and said, "She's a pretty little girl, but a mean son-of-a-******."

I've always regarded that as one of the most honest assessments of my character I've ever heard.

No flaming here.

Know that if we don't laugh, we cry.

That's me and my Dad's favorite saying when it comes to my Mom. It's so sad to see the once vibrant and independent woman that she once was now just a shell of herself. And to the person who got offended by this thread we've found that laughter can be a huge stress release and my Mom even joins in on it. She's in the hospital now after undergoing surgery for a fractured hip but she has everyone who saw her in stitches because she is so funny(and she was even laughing). I didn't get offended when they laughed with us.

What does offend me is the ignorance of some medical professionals when it comes to dementia patients. You don't sit a call bell on their bed and tell them to use it when they need help or explain to them how to work the tv because 5 seconds later they are going to forget what you just told them. My Mom was at the ER for constipation a few years back when she was home and the nurse puts her on the commode with a call bell and tells her to ring it when she is done. Fifteen minutes later I go in to see how she is and she is just so confused-she had no idea what that string was for. Luckily the charge nurse I talked to today was willing to hear me regarding these concerns and came up with some solutions that work.

Luckily the majority of the CNA's and nurses at the SNF where she lives now know how to treat Alzmeimers patients but every once in a while there will be someone who thinks they know it all and I have had to file a concern over one of them because she was bullying my Mom. That's what offends me, not the nurse who might laugh when my mom says or does something cute and funny.

I'm sorry but I don't agree. I value my elderly Mom who has Alzheimers very much but I still laugh when she says something that is funny or cute. So does she.

That was in reply to the person who says this thread devalues the elderly.

I'm the one who wrote the article about how the elderly are devalued, and I am also the author of this article.

I do not feel that sharing the funny, witty, and cute statements made by demented elderly residents devalues them in any form or fashion. I've previously mentioned that the healthcare workers who care about the welfare of this population are laughing with them, and not at them. There is a significant difference.

We can either recall their statements with fondness for the elder and a healthy sense of humor, or we can recall them with sheer horror and sadness for their declining cognitive function. The former, in my humble opinion, is milder for all involved, including the residents.

The nurses at the SNF where my Mom is just love my Mom because she IS so funny and cute. As her daughter I find nothing wrong with it and do see the difference between laughing at them and laughing with them. It makes me feel good to know that she is so well loved by the staff.