Serious older woman sitting at kitchen table

Three principles that experienced carers come back to again and again — and why they work

The three principles most widely cited as golden rules in dementia care are: first, never argue or try to correct the person, as this causes unnecessary distress; second, enter their reality rather than trying to drag them back to yours, meaning you validate their experience even if it does not match the facts; and third, focus on emotions rather than content, responding to how the person is feeling rather than the literal accuracy of what they are saying. These principles sit at the heart of person-centred dementia care as developed by Professor Tom Kitwood. They recognise that the emotional experience of the person with dementia is always valid and real, even when their perception of the world has become significantly altered by the disease.

Frequently Asked Questions Related to Home care support

Next of kin and care home fees — the financial pressure families feel that has no legal basis

read this FAQ

Free home care for dementia — the entitlements most families never claim

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Legal responsibility for someone with dementia — what Lasting Power of Attorney actually means

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Who is financially responsible for someone with dementia? Not who most families assume

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The hardest part of caring for someone with dementia — and why nobody tells you it's this

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The 'happy pill' for dementia — what carers mean by it, what doctors prescribe, and what works better

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Why people with dementia sleep so much — and when it's normal versus a sign of something else

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Keeping someone with dementia content — the daily habits that matter more than occasional big gestures

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