Health07:47 · 1h ago

Living with a Spouse with Dementia Transforms Long-Term Relationships

YnetCenter
Translated & summarized from Ynet by baba
The story · English

The public conversation around Alzheimer's disease has recently increased, but discussions mostly focus on the diagnosed individual, their memory, early diagnosis, medications, and treatment. However, the experience of the spouse living alongside the patient, whose relationship undergoes profound changes, is rarely addressed. Dr. Inbal Maayan, a geriatric medicine specialist and medical director at Tzabar Medicine Hospital, emphasizes that dementia is not only a brain disease but also a disease of the couple's relationship. It gradually alters communication, decision-making, expressions of love, future planning, and daily life sharing.

Long-term couples often develop compensatory mechanisms where one partner covers for the other's memory lapses, which can delay diagnosis and assistance. The healthy spouse naturally takes on roles such as managing medications, finances, appointments, and bureaucracy, sometimes becoming the shared memory for both. This shift can lead to feelings of loneliness and grief for the relationship as it was, even while the loved one is still physically present.

Dr. Maayan highlights the importance of caregivers maintaining social connections, hobbies, rest, and family support to sustain their caregiving role without guilt. Intimacy remains significant despite dementia, often expressed through touch and presence rather than words. Yet, challenges arise regarding the patient's ability to understand situations or consent, requiring open dialogue and professional guidance.

Despite losses, emotional memory often persists longer than factual memory, allowing patients to respond to familiar voices, music, scents, or touch. Families are encouraged to create moments of closeness to build a new language of connection. Dr. Maayan concludes that enduring relationships are measured not only by shared memories but by the ability to remain present and find new ways to express love as memories fade.

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