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Salon

What my 5-year-old son taught me about medicine

Daniel Y. Dodek
CMAJ April 02, 2013 185 (6) 536; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.121697
Daniel Y. Dodek
Vancouver, BC
Roles: Family physician
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  • On Dr. Dodek's Anni (What my 5-year-old taught me about medicine)
    Susan D Russell
    Posted on: 11 April 2013
  • Posted on: (11 April 2013)
    Page navigation anchor for On Dr. Dodek's Anni (What my 5-year-old taught me about medicine)
    On Dr. Dodek's Anni (What my 5-year-old taught me about medicine)
    • Susan D Russell, Registered clinical counsellor
    • Other Contributors:

    On Dr. Dodek's Anni (What my 5-year-old son taught me about medicine) I commend Dr. Dodek's sensitivity to his son's visit with Anni at the nursing home. I wonder however, if there wasn't more to their gentle interaction than met the eye. While studying for my Master's degree in counselling, I completed two practicums concurrently, one in a trauma therapy certification program and the other as a counselling assistant at...

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    On Dr. Dodek's Anni (What my 5-year-old son taught me about medicine) I commend Dr. Dodek's sensitivity to his son's visit with Anni at the nursing home. I wonder however, if there wasn't more to their gentle interaction than met the eye. While studying for my Master's degree in counselling, I completed two practicums concurrently, one in a trauma therapy certification program and the other as a counselling assistant at a residence for patients suffering from Alzheimer's and other dementias. One resident with advanced dementia was generally unapproachable - withdrawn and uncommunicative. During the Christmas season a group of children arrived to sing Carols at the facility. She became very agitated and tried, quite violently, to push the children out of the room. The assumption by staff was that, in her dementia and old age, she did not like children. Upon reading the social history of the patient I discovered that, as a young woman, she had lived in war torn England. One day when walking in her village she saw a class of children out with their teacher on a field trip. They began to cross the bridge which she herself had just traversed. Suddenly, there was a huge explosion behind her. When she looked back the bridge had been bombed; the children and their teacher all died in the event. This story led me to more and more research of the trauma history of many of the residents and, almost without exception, I came to the conclusion that much of their repetitive, often violent, behaviour was the result of previously experienced traumatic events. In their dementia they continued to act out, appearing to attempt to resolve and heal the emotional scars of these earlier experiences. This woman, I believe, was still desperately trying to keep the children safe. To my knowledge little research has yet to be done on the possibility that dementia, in particular Alzheimer's disease, can be the result of long term dis-regulation of nervous system biochemistry in the body and the resulting neurological deficits. Dr. Dodek's story, I am certain, reflects the history of his patient Anni. Did Anni see something in Max that no one else could see - perhaps her past as a tender and loving mother who had lost her child many years before? Further research leading to a deeper understanding of the connection between unresolved life trauma and some dementias would perhaps lead to more compassionate therapeutic care for patients with dementia.

    Conflict of Interest:

    None declared

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    Competing Interests: None declared.
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Canadian Medical Association Journal: 185 (6)
CMAJ
Vol. 185, Issue 6
2 Apr 2013
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What my 5-year-old son taught me about medicine
Daniel Y. Dodek
CMAJ Apr 2013, 185 (6) 536; DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.121697

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What my 5-year-old son taught me about medicine
Daniel Y. Dodek
CMAJ Apr 2013, 185 (6) 536; DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.121697
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