Therapeutic Lying With Dementia Patients

The intended purpose of this article is to further explore the practice of therapeutic lying to demented patients. Specialties Geriatric Article

Therapeutic lying is the practice of telling little 'white lies' or fibs to prevent from agitating the patient with dementia. Even though some of us were taught to never lie to any patient under any circumstances due to ethical issues, please realize that the truth often inflicts unreasonable pain and mental anguish upon the demented patient.

As caregivers, we want to be completely honest with our patients. However, when someone has dementia, honesty can lead to distress both for us and the one we are caring for (AGIS, 2009). For example, the 89-year-old female with mid-stage Alzheimer's disease asks about her husband on a daily basis because she has forgotten that he died more than twenty years ago.

The nurse has the option of reminding this lady that her husband is dead, but this will also remind her about the mental pain and profound grief associated with that loss. This female will likely ask the same question tomorrow because, due to her declining cognitive function, she cannot remember yesterday's events. The nurse may choose to provide these daily reminders of the spouse's death, which will only serve to reopen the demented lady's emotional wounds on a daily basis.

On the other hand, the nurse has the option of employing therapeutic lying to handle the situation. Instead of telling the demented patient repeatedly that her husband has died, the nurse reassures her by saying, "He has gone fishing with Uncle Bart." Uncle Bart also died many years ago, but the female patient has forgotten about that, too. Instead of collapsing to the floor in tears, our demented patient smiles and says, "I hope they catch some good ones!"

In most cases, telling the truth is the reasonable, moral, and ethical thing to do for all parties involved. The problem is that patients who are in the middle and late stages of dementia cannot be reasoned with. When someone is acting in ways that don't make sense, we tend to carefully explain the situation, calling on his or her sense of appropriateness to get compliance (AGIS, 2009). However, the demented patient has lost this sense of logic. Therapeutic lying works in these situations, whereas reasoning and logic fail miserably.

It is best to use therapeutic lying when the truth would incite mental anguish, anxiety, agitation, and confusion in the demented patient. Also use therapeutic lying when the demented patient is obviously not grounded in reality and is living in a different time than everyone else around him or her. People with dementia do not need to be grounded in reality (AGIS, 2009). If the 92-year-old gentleman believes that the year is 1962 and that John F. Kennedy is the president of the United States, what is wrong with allowing him to think it is 1962? Reality orientation would be more of a hindrance than a help in this situation. Instead of forcing him to live in the present day, the caregiver may wish to step into his world.


References

Family Caregiver Alliance

Ten real-life strategies for dementia caregiving

Ten Tips for Communicating with a Person with Dementia

Validation Therapy & Redirection : How to Talk to Elder with Dementia

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I work in a dementia unit. ii have a resident, 95 years old looking for her mother, i did try reality orientation and it just made her miserable and cried so hard that it was difficult to console her at that time. It made her realize " i was dumb to look for my mother, at my age of 90+ yrs old, how old could my mother be" she said, but it made me realize, i did not have to submit her to that, not even 30 minutes she forgot all about it and asked again if i saw her mother, therapeutic lying is the best, that is what i have been doing after that..I won't have to submit them to such painful memories...

I LOVE THIS article! I worked at an Assisted Living c Memory Care and we would do Therapeutic Lying and then we're told that we were supposed to reorient the resident who asked the same questions every 1-4 minutes the truth about her husband's death etc...causing her so much agony and sadness, instead of he went to the store or to go fishing...ugh glad I am gone from there...so many things wrong at that place

Specializes in Mental Health, Gerontology, Palliative.

I struggle with the idea of lying, even if the person wont remember what I've said.

I recall when I first started out i had this one patient who always wanted me to call her mum and come and pick her up. The patient was in her mid 80s and mum had been dead for many years.

I used to say "I'll make a call for you" and if the patient insisted on me making the call infront of them I'd pick up the phone and call an automated service such as 'phone banking and then tell them I couldnt get through to anyone. I always try to be as truthful as possible.

The approach I take is one of "dont argue with the person with dementia"