What to do about Alzheimer’s with violence

Alzheimer’s disease with violent behavior can be given psychotherapy, antipsychotic medication, enhanced restraint and supervision to improve the condition. 1. Psychotherapy: When dementia develops, you can go to the psychological clinic to improve your symptoms through psychological guidance, including behavioral cognitive therapy and systematic desensitization therapy. 2. Antipsychotic drug treatment: dementia with violent behavior can be given antipsychotic drugs, such as olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone and so on, under the guidance of the doctor. 3. Strengthen the constraints and supervision: such as in the patient’s range of activities prohibit the placement of tools that can cause injury, such as knives, sticks, boiling water, electrical appliances, etc., easy to slip and fall in the place to install handrails or handles. Family members should also do a good job of caring for the patient, do not use words to stimulate the patient. When the patient has a serious propensity for violence can be under the guidance of the doctor to a certain extent to control the patient’s range of activities, in order to prevent them from hurting people or self-injury. Alzheimer’s disease with violent behavior is recommended to seek medical treatment in a timely manner, under the guidance of specialists to choose a treatment plan.