We help Support at Home-approved families find care.
Aged Care Home
Support at Home
Retirement Living
Finance & Placement Advice
Healthcare Equipment
Mobility and Equipment
Patient care equipment
Skin and wound Care
Safety and Security
Assessments
Assistive Technology
End of Life
Financial Services
Funerals
Placement Consultants
Advocacy
No results found
No results found
No results found
Advanced Filters
Distance (proximity)
Price Range
RAD (Refundable Accommodation Deposit) is a lump-sum payment for aged care homes. It is fully refundable when the resident leaves, as long as there are no outstanding fees.
Min RAD
Any
$250,000
$500,000
$750,000
$1,000,000
$1,500,000
$1,750,000
$2,000,000
Maximum RAD
Any
$250,000
$500,000
$750,000
$1,000,000
$1,500,000
$1,750,000
$2,000,000
Facility size
Based on how many beds the facilty has.
Any
Small
Medium
Large
Service Delivery
Services offered at a location or in a region
Any
On Site
Service Region
Features
Single rooms with ensuites
Respite beds
Extra service beds
Secure dementia beds
24/7 Registered nursing
Full or Partially government funded
Couples accommodation
Facility has pets
Non-dedicated respite
Palliative care
Partner considered without ACAT
Secure garden
Transition care
Cafe/Kiosk
Chapel/Church
Hairdressing Salon
Facility Owned Transport
Single Rooms
Rooms with ensuites
Registered nursing
Non secure dementia care
Diversional therapy
Medication supervision
Respite care
Secure access
Small pets considered

Distraction to destroy dementia?

Older people may not be as forgetful as they seem, according to Canadian scientists. Researchers used a distraction learning strategy to help older adults overcome age related forgetting and boost their performance to that of younger adults.

Posted
by Grace Mindwell

Older people may not be as forgetful as they seem, according to Canadian scientists.

Baycrest Health Sciences, Rotman Research Institute (RRI) and the University of Toronto`s Psychology Department researchers used a distraction learning strategy to help older adults overcome age related forgetting, dementia, and boost their performance to that of younger adults.

A growing body of science is showing that older brains are adept at processing irrelevant and relevant information in the environment, without conscious effort, to aid memory performance.

“Older brains may be doing something very adaptive with distraction to compensate for weakening memory,” Renee Biss, lead investigator and PhD student, said.

“In our study we asked whether distraction can be used to foster memoryboosting rehearsal for older adults. The answer is yes,” she said.

Lynn Hasher, senior scientist on the study and a leading authority in attention and inhibitory functioning in younger and older adults, said: “To eliminate agerelated forgetfulness across three consecutive memory experiments and help older adults perform like younger adults is dramatic and to our knowledge a totally unique finding.

“Poor regulation of attention by older adults may actually have some benefits for memory,” Ms Hasher said.

The findings have intriguing implications for designing learning strategies for the mature, older student and equipping seniorhousing with relevant visual distraction cues throughout the living environment that would serve as rehearsal opportunities to remember things like an upcoming appointment or medications to take, even if the cues are not consciously paid attention to.

The findings are published online in Psychological Science.

Read next

Sign up or log in with your phone number
Phone
Enter your phone number to receive a verification notification
Aged Care Guide is endorsed by
COTA logo
ACIA logo