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Dementia
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Investigating poor insight in Alzheimer’s disease

A survey of research approaches

Barbro Robertsson

Göteborg University, Sweden

Monica Nordström

Göteborg University, Sweden

Helle Wijk

Göteborg University, and Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden

Persons with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) often seem to have a poor insight into the functional deficits brought about by the dementing process. There are many indications that preserved insight into deficits in dementia is of advantage to a person with AD. Various research approaches have been adopted to investigate poor insight related to AD. The purpose of this article was to present various research approaches for investigating poor insight into deficits in AD. The study is based on a literature survey. The findings show that concept of poor insight has been investigated in detail from different perspectives. Each one of the perspectives found, the neuropsychological, the psychological and the socio-psychological, has its merits, but none of them has yet led to study results that make us fully understand what poor insight implies and involves. We need integrated knowledge from the different perspectives, and in multidisciplinary research settings we believe that such knowledge could be developed.

Key Words: Alzheimer’s disease • coping strategies • impaired awareness • poor insight • self-unawareness

Dementia, Vol. 6, No. 1, 45-61 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1471301207075629


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