Like everyone, seniors who have Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia benefit from feeling engaged and productive. Memory care communities offer activities and entertainment to encourage social interaction, reduce anxiety, stimulate the brain, and inspire feelings of accomplishment. To engage residents with different needs and abilities, memory care communities often provide a diverse calendar of activities, including fitness classes, holiday parties, art classes, brain games, and reminiscence activities.
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Research shows that therapeutically stimulating activities for memory care patients have many benefits in long-term care settings. For instance, it can improve cognitive function, communication skills, and promote self-worth. It can also reduce loneliness, reliance on medications, and occurrence of common dementia symptoms.[01]
“We’re providing the care [residents] need, but we’re also providing them with the engagement and opportunities they’re interested in and passionate about,” says Libbi Hash, national director of wellness and memory care programming at Kisco Senior Living.
Memory care communities even encourage residents’ families to get involved and share their loved one’s interests, abilities, and preferences if their loved one is unable to. This can help communities personalize activity plans to better accommodate each resident.
Many of the following activities can be adapted to engage dementia patients at home. However, memory care communities, care homes, and even some nursing homes provide increased support, supervision, trained professionals, and a range of proper equipment and materials to provide a larger variety of activities in a safe and social manner.
Physical activity is a crucial factor in improving brain health. It can help improve cognitive function, promote independence, and improve psychological health.[02] It can also reduce the risk of heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, mortality, and falls and increase a person’s overall health and longevity.
Some common physical exercises found in a memory care community include:
Approximately 70% of memory care communities within A Place for Mom’s network offer a combination of some of the fitness activities listed above.[05]
Cognitive impairment from a dementia diagnosis may feel isolating, resulting in anxiety, depression, and loneliness. Therefore, it’s important for seniors to socialize as it can help them feel valued and supported.[06]
Providing a healthy social environment can help seniors with dementia regain a sense of self-worth, have a more positive attitude toward life, and develop better eating and exercise habits.[06]
To help seniors socialize, memory care staff members often introduce seniors to one another based on their interests. To make introductions natural, staff often encourage residents to sit together during meals or in communal spaces like a courtyard or living area.
Common social activities include a variety of activities favored by residents of the community:
Within A Place for Mom’s memory care network, over 60% of communities offer a gardening club and about 56% of communities offer cooking activities to bring residents together.[05]
Engaging activities like music lessons and arts and crafts offer a creative outlet for memory care residents, no matter their level of skill or cognitive ability. Studies show that painting, drawing, crafting, musical activities, and even browsing art styles allow freedom of expression and a chance to exercise fine motor skills.[07]
Art therapy involves encouraging artistically inclined residents to express themselves using their medium of choice. Artistic expression is known to help soothe dementia symptoms and engage the brain.
Memory care communities may include the following types of arts and crafts in their programming:
Within A Place for Mom’s network, nearly 75% of memory care communities offer arts and crafts activities to help residents engage their creative side.[05]
Music therapy for dementia involves listening to familiar music to promote reminiscence. It’s known to help enhance memory, reduce agitation, and improve cognition.[08]
To help seniors reminisce using music, memory care communities typically incorporate the following musical activities:
Nearly 79% of memory care communities within A Place for Mom’s network offer some combination of the musical activities listed above.[05]
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“Everyone has a need to feel useful, no matter what stage of life they’re in,” Hash says.
Activities that help residents reflect and feel productive are crucial in memory care. While productive activities may look different in each community, some of the most common include engaging in life skill stations and daily tasks.
Since many older adults with dementia mentally revert to a time when they were younger, memory care communities aim to simulate common settings from residents’ pasts. These replications are called autonomous engagement stations — or life skill stations — and they aim to provide a familiar environment for residents to feel safe and reflect.
“If a resident is restless at night and wants to get up, the autonomous areas are a safe setting where they can go and engage in an activity that brings them comfort or a sense of satisfaction,” Hash says.
Life skills stations are built around a specific task or occupation, such as:
Staff at memory care communities create opportunities for those with dementia to continue to be productive in ways that give them meaning and joy. This approach is sometimes called the Montessori Method or life skills engagement. It involves helping seniors revive skills and interests — even if physical abilities have deteriorated from dementia — rather than redirecting them to easier tasks.
Memory care calendars may include various life skills tasks to help residents feel accomplished and motivated. Examples could include some of the following everyday activities:
After a dementia diagnosis, it becomes crucial to identify brain-stimulating activities that work for each unique individual. To engage different parts of the brain in various ways, memory care communities use a variety of cognitive and tactile activities.
Cognitive stimulation therapy is an evidence-based treatment used in people with mild to moderate dementia.[10] Its goal is to guide people with dementia through a series of themed activities — like memory games — to promote continued learning and improve working memory. Common activities include things like the following:
Within A Place for Mom’s memory care network, over 55% of communities offer specific brain fitness activities and exercises to help seniors improve cognitive function.[05]
The sense of touch can help memory care residents feel joyful and secure, which can in turn soothe some common dementia symptoms.[01] Communities use tactile stimulation in a variety of ways:
Celebrating common holidays — and some lesser-known ones like National Flower Day is one way memory care facilities foster community. It can add excitement and variety for residents who don’t get to celebrate holidays the same way they used to.
To help residents feel included and joyous during mainstream holidays, many memory care communities host fun activities:
Over 80% of memory care communities within A Place for Mom’s network host holiday parties and celebrations for residents.[05]
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Oftentimes, memory care communities bring in pets and host unique activities to engage and calm residents. For example, a holiday like National Pet Day provides an excellent way to incorporate pet therapy. Also known as animal-assisted therapy, it’s known to decrease loneliness and agitation, and promote pleasure, relaxation, and better health habits.[11]
While some memory care facilities have a community pet, it’s more common for therapy dogs or cats to visit from a contracted company. Here are some ways a community may incorporate pet therapy activities:
To help residents stay connected to their loved ones and their cherished memories, memory care communities often use reminiscence therapy. Communities sometimes encourage family members and friends to come visit and participate in these events:
Within A Place for Mom’s memory care network, over 55% of communities offer dedicated reminiscence programs with activities like memory box therapy, music therapy, and more.
Engaging technology can slow cognitive decline and improve well-being in seniors with dementia.[13] Technology can also help memory care communities appeal to residents’ individual histories and interests.
Below are three stimulating technologies that memory care communities use to engage seniors with dementia:
Person-centered care for dementia uses personal histories, stories, and interests to help residents thrive in memory care communities. This approach is important when curating memory care programming ideas to help personalize activities based on unique personalities.
“When a new resident moves in, we learn their likes, dislikes, and interests. We create activities and encourage participation based on those passions,” Hash says. “As residents transition through their journey and aren’t as capable, we can modify what they’re doing so they’re still able to participate.”
By understanding preferences, pasts, and emotional needs, a community can design activities to best fit each resident’s personality, interests, and abilities. Memory care communities consider the group of residents, in addition to individual interests, to create their monthly activities calendar.
“As our resident population changes, so do our autonomous stations, the activities we plan, and even the hours we do things,” Hash explains.
There are many ways community activities and schedules may vary by resident population:
Before moving a loved one into memory care, it’s important to get a sense of the activities offered to residents. When touring, ask for the community’s memory care activities calendar. It should include all the activities offered by staff each month, along with the specific times your loved one can expect to participate. Families should also ask how easily their loved one’s interests and hobbies might be able to be incorporated into the monthly schedule.
Here’s a sample memory care activities calendar:
Many families choose a memory care facility based on its robust memory care activity programming. To learn more about local memory care options, including prices and activities, contact one of A Place for Mom’s local Senior Living Advisors. Their guidance comes at no cost to you. Together, they’ve helped hundreds of thousands of families find senior living for their loved ones.
Key Takeaways
Mileski, M., Topinka, J. B., Brooks, M., Lonidier, C., Linker, K. & Veen, K. V. (2018, May 17). Sensory and memory stimulation as a means to care for individuals with dementia in long-term care facilities. Clinical Interventions in Aging.
Nuzum, H., Stickel, A., Corona, M., Zeller, M., Melrose, R. J., & Wilkins, S. S. (2020, February 12). Potential benefits of physical activity in MCI and dementia. Behavioural Neurology.
Thompson, R. (2018, June). Gardening for health: a regular dose of gardening. Clinical Medicine.
Harvard Health Publishing. (2024, January 31). A sharper mind: tai chi can improve cognitive function.
A Place for Mom. (2024). A Place for Mom proprietary data.
Ruthirakuhan, M., Luedke, A. C., Tam, A., Goel, A., Kurji, A., & Garcia, A. (2012, December 31). Use of physical and intellectual activities and socialization in the management of cognitive decline of aging and in dementia: A review. Journal of Aging Research.
Boersma, P., van der Ploeg, T., & Gobbens, R. J. J. (2021, November 1). The added value of art for the well-being of older people with chronic psychiatric illnesses and dementia living in long-term care facilities, and on the collaboration between their caregivers and artists. Healthcare.
Lam, H. L., Li, W. T. V., Laher, I., & Wong, R. Y. (2020, September 25). Effects of music therapy on patients with dementia—a systematic review. Geriatrics.
Mitchell, G., McCormack, B., & McCance, T. (2014, August 25). Therapeutic use of dolls for people living with dementia: A critical review of the literature. Dementia.
Piras, F., Carbone, E., Faggian, S., Salvalaio, E., Gardini, S., & Borella, E. (2017, October). Efficacy of cognitive stimulation therapy for older adults with vascular dementia. Dementia & Neuropsychologia.
Lai, N. M., Chang, S. M. W., Ng, S. S., Stanaway, F., Tan, S. L., & Chaiyakunapruk. (2019, January 14). Animal-assisted therapy for dementia. Cochrane Library.
Keller, H. H., Martin, L. S., Dupuis, S., Reimber, H., & Genoe, R. (2015, October 9). Strategies to support engagement and continuity of activity during mealtimes for families living with dementia; a qualitative study. BMC Geriatrics.
Astell, A. J., Bouranis, N., Hoey, J., Lindauer, A., Mihailidis, A., Nugent, C., & Robillard, J. M. (2019, June 27). Technology and dementia: The future is now. Journal of Dementia and Cognitive Disorders.
University of Kent. (2019, May 9). VR can improve quality of life for people with dementia. ScienceDaily.
Clemenson, G. D., Stark, S. M., Rutledge, S. M., & Stark, C. E. L. (2020, May 18). Enriching hippocampal memory function in older adults through video games. Behavioural Brain Research.
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