Family last safety net in dementia care
As Alzheimer's cases rise in China, loved ones shoulder burden amid limited institutional support and deep-rooted expectations of filial duty. Wei Wangyu reports.
A different path
At Beijing's Kang Yuxuan Care Center, an 85-year-old woman named Guan sits in her wheelchair, gently tapping a percussion instrument during a group music session. Two years ago, Guan was bedridden, frequently hospitalized, and considered a candidate for tube feeding.
Her family, exhausted by repeated ICU admissions, wanted to stop aggressive treatment but feared what that decision might mean. "We thought refusing procedures meant we didn't love her enough,"Guan's daughter said.
The shift came not through advanced technology, but through deliberate restraint. Under the guidance of Jin Enjing, a geriatrician with training in Japan, Sweden and the United States, Guan's care plan focused on restoring fragments of daily life, which included eating from ceramic plates, folding origami, receiving hand massages and listening to familiar songs.
"Our goal here was never to extend life at any cost," Jin said. "It was to return dignity to living."
Jin's philosophy challenges a dominant model of elder care in China, where safety protocols and medical control often override autonomy. At the Kang Yuxuan center, residents cook with adaptive utensils, sit by large windows for spatial orientation, and participate in music and touch-based therapies.
"A space isn't a proper home for Alzheimer patients without the clatter of dishes," Jin said. "We cannot promise to eliminate all risk, but we can try our best to create safe autonomy for them."
Over six months, Guan regained the ability to eat soft foods. Her daughter recently asked about her getting dentures. "This was a request that would have seemed impossible before," Jin said.






















