The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Churches minister to Alzheimer’s relatives

Clergy take classes to understand impact of disease, offer comfort.

- By Laura Berrios

Helping families who are facing Alzheimer’s is a passion for Sheila Welch. She walked that journey herself years ago as caregiver to her mom, and now leads a dementia ministry at her church, Due West United Methodist in Marietta.

The ministry came about when two women from the church discovered they were both caring for moms with Alzheimer’s. “They literally fell into each others arms in the parking lot,” Welch said.

From that encounter, a support group was formed and the ministry has continued to grow and evolve over the past six years. Last year, the church served more than 1,000 families through dementia education events, such as workshops, caregiver support groups and an annual caregivers’ conference.

The next natural step was to help other churches start their own caregivers’ ministry.

“I saw what was happening in our own ministry and how it continued to grow and I thought, our area cannot be the only one that needs this,” Welch said.

Alzheimer’s, a form of dementia, is a terminal illness characteri­zed by memory loss, confusion and a decline in judgment and reasoning. It can also involve changes in personalit­y and behavior. Family caregivers can become consumed by their tasks and feel isolated, even from their church.

Due West UMC put together a tool kit and a how-to template and invited pastors and church leaders to a workshop last October. They sponsored a secondary workshop on Thursday focusing on ministerin­g to those living with the disease, which in turn helps the whole family.

Welch says these initial workshops will become annual events

to raise awareness of dementia and provide tools for churches that want to do something to help.

Cindy Snyder of Madison attended the initial workshop, seeking to better help a neighbor living with EarlyOnset Alzheimer’s.

She returned home with a determinat­ion to start something in her own 500-member church in Madison, about 60 miles east of Atlanta.

Snyder and Margaret Ligon, director of adult spiritual growth at Madison First United Methodist, put together a community workshop. They brought in Atlanta Alzheimer’s Associatio­n speakers and others. “In the back of my mind, I’m thinking, if we have a good turnout, we would love to start a support group here,” Ligon said. There were no dementia caretaker support groups in Morgan County.

Attendees did indeed want a support group.

“We saw people walk out of the workshop, and it was like they could finally take a deep breath,” Ligon said.

Madison UMC had its first monthly caregivers’ support group meeting in February.

Ligon said it wasn’t difficult to put together the conference or start the support group. They used the template set up by Due West UMC, and looked at what other churches in neighborin­g counties were doing.

Welch said some churches may not want to start a whole new ministry for caregivers, but can help these families simply by raising awareness and educating the congregati­on and community about dementia. She said this helps break through the stigma and keeps families from feeling isolated.

Another starting place is teaching people how to communicat­e with those who have dementia so they can visit church members afflicted with the disease.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY LAURA BERRIOS ?? Chaplain Hal Cole talks to the ministers, clergy and church leaders attending a dementia education workshop on Thursday at Due West United Methodist Church in Marietta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY LAURA BERRIOS Chaplain Hal Cole talks to the ministers, clergy and church leaders attending a dementia education workshop on Thursday at Due West United Methodist Church in Marietta.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY LAURA BERRIOS ?? Chaplain Hal Cole talks to the ministers, clergy and church leaders attending a dementia education workshop on Thursday at Due West United Methodist Church in Marietta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY LAURA BERRIOS Chaplain Hal Cole talks to the ministers, clergy and church leaders attending a dementia education workshop on Thursday at Due West United Methodist Church in Marietta.

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