German bishop: Pastoral ministers must get training about dementia

Gino Verani, who has dementia, covers his face as he sits in the kitchen at home in San Fiorano, Italy, April 10, 2020. Dealing with dementia should be an integral part of the training and further education of pastoral ministers, said a prominent German bishop. (CNS photo/Marzio Toniolo via Reuters)

DRESDEN, Germany (CNS) ─ Dealing with dementia should be an integral part of the training and further education of pastoral ministers, said Bishop Franz-Josef Bode, deputy president of the German bishops' conference.

More and more people suffering from dementia needed support just as much as their relatives, Bishop Bode said April 28 in a podcast of the Catholic Academy of the Diocese of Dresden-Meissen. The German Catholic news agency KNA reported he said every pastoral minister should have a basic knowledge of how to deal with dementia.

Dementia is a generic term for the impaired ability to remember, think or make decisions that interferes with doing everyday activities. It is not a disease itself, but is often caused by diseases such as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's. It is one of the most frequently mentioned fears that people cite with regard to old age.

KNA reported that on April 30, Bishop Bode was scheduled to participate in the start of the church's "Week for Life" campaign in the eastern city of Leipzig. The joint campaign this year focuses on people with dementia.

Bishop Bode said pastoral ministers had to ask themselves whether they were sufficiently aware of people with dementia and their relatives. In addition, integrating people with dementia into the general life of the church was a new challenge.

The bishop said that in the pastoral care of relatives it also was important to make clear that the "form of relationship is different, but that does not mean that there is no relationship anymore." He said it was important to encourage relatives to be patient and to convey that "this is still the person that you love, even if they have changed."

The bishop added that dealing with dementia sufferers was particularly challenging because a healthy person gradually "becomes quite different." It was "a kind of litmus test whether we also stand by the fact that life to the end is wanted by God and retains its dignity."



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