Why People with Dementia Rummage Through Drawers and Cupboards
Perhaps you’ve seen your loved one with dementia repeatedly rearrange, empty out and refill dresser drawers and then move on to the cupboard and do the same thing. This activity is known as rummaging, a behaviour that sometimes develops in Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia.
Why Rummaging Is Considered a Challenging Behaviour
Rummaging can frustrate caregivers because it can make quite a mess. The entire contents of dressers may be removed and sometimes hidden all over the room. Caregivers can feel like they’re constantly putting things back or trying to find what the person with dementia has moved around. Sometimes, rummaging can be a concern for the person with dementia if it is related to anxiety and causing distress. At other times, rummaging seems to be an enjoyable activity, such as when the person is sorting items or going through familiar items that may be reassuring to them.
Why It Develops
Sometimes, people rummage because they’ve hidden an item and can’t remember where they placed it. This may result in them believing that it was stolen from them. Other people appear to rummage through items that are familiar and reassuring to them. This desire to have familiar things around them can sometimes be combined with hoarding extra items, whether it’s food, papers, or clothes. Rummaging may also be triggered by boredom. People with dementia, at times, may experience loneliness and boredom, and sorting through the things around them can occupy their time.
How to respond to rummaging
- Remove valuable items, such as an important collection, that could pose a danger. For example, make sure that chemicals and other harmful objects are not accessible. Sharp objects, such as scissors and knives, should also not be accessible.
- Provide a drawer or a whole dresser full of safe and inexpensive items. Make rummaging an activity to enjoy.
- Offer alternate activities such as sorting coloured socks or folding washcloths. These common household tasks may be reassuring and enjoyable.
- Use distraction strategies and provide other meaningful activities, especially if you believe that boredom is responsible for rummaging behaviours.
- Create a rummage box by using a shoebox to hold special pictures (but make sure you have kept the originals in a safe place), items related to his hobbies, or objects that he used to work with at his work. If your loved one is moving to a nursing home or assisted living, send this valuable tool with him.
- If she appears anxious or distressed while she rummages, try to figure out why. If it’s because she’s looking for a specific object and can’t find it, consider buying several of that object or a close replica to reassure her. Sometimes, one object can make someone with dementia feel grounded and safe.
- If her rummaging seems to bring her pleasure and is not posing a significant issue other than creating a mess, don’t sweat it. Think of it as an activity that brings her joy and reassurance. However, if your loved one’s rummaging seems related to emotional distress, such as a consistent paranoia that someone is stealing from her, be sure to report this behaviour to the doctor to discuss other possible treatment options to improve her quality of life.
It’s not unusual to feel irritation if your loved one constantly moves things around, opening drawers or cupboards to look in them and rearranging and losing their contents.
It may be helpful to view her rummaging as a picture of her attempting to rearrange things enough to make sense since it is likely that her world does not make sense to her right now and to find the information and familiarity that she’s missing as she lives with a lack of information and familiarity daily.