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Reseña del editor Music is important to us as a species, and it can be particularly important to people with dementia. Singing in a group can improve a person's mood, recall, self-esteem and overall quality of life. Whether you're a trained musician or someone who has no training but can hold a tune (and that is almost everyone), this book will give you guidance on every stage of setting up a singing group for people with dementia: choosing songs, structuring sessions, choosing and setting up a venue, training volunteers, finding funding, keeping participants safe and ensuring that everyone has a good time. Biografía del autor Diana Kerr is widely published on topics related to dementia, learning disability and dementia, and night-time care. She has a lifelong interest and involvement in music making and has been advocating the use of music with people with dementia for many years and is now involved with the provision of singing groups for people with dementia. She has 30 years' experience as a practitioner, researcher, educator and trainer in the field of dementia and learning disability and dementia. Previously Diana was the Course Director for the MSc in Dementia Studies at the University of Stirling. She was then Research Fellow at the Centre for Research on Families and Relationships at the University of Edinburgh where her area of research and emphasis was predominantly in the field of dementia and learning disability and dementia. She was also an Associate Consultant to Hammond Care Australia where she provided consultation in learning disability and dementia and on night-time care for people with dementia. Diana is an advisor to service providers and planners who support people with dementia and people with a learning disability and dementia. She lives in Edinburgh.


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Dementia support groups online dailystrength dementia support group dementia is the progressive decline in cognitive function due to damage or disease in the brain beyond what might be expected from normal aging particularly affected areas may be memory attention language and problem solving although particularly in the later stages of the condition affected persons may be disoriented in time place and person not knowing who they

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Singing groups for people with dementia singing groups for people with dementia a guide to setting up and running groups in community and residential settings authoreditor diana kerr year 2015 publisher the choir press isbn 9781909300958 primary sidebar find resources

Singing wellbeing and health context evidence and of a multidisciplinary health team rather the guide draws upon the experience of groups of people who live with the effects of dementia and who sing in established dementiafocused singing groups it also draws on the experience of music practitioners and health researchers in the sidney de haan research centre for

Singing with people with dementia positive effects of group singing with people with dementia often conflict with neurological estimations of remaining capacities and hence give rise to the question about underlying mechanisms although there is no direct proof there are possibilities to elucidate processes on the basis of translational considerations and metasyntheses