June 9, 2026 min
10 min
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When a person living with dementia repeatedly walks around a care home, checks doors, or says they need to go home, it’s often labelled as “wandering.” But what if that behaviour isn’t random at all?
In this thought-provoking solo episode of the Able to Care Podcast, behaviour specialist Andy Baker challenges common assumptions about dementia-related behaviours and explores what might really be happening beneath the surface.
Drawing on practical experience, psychology, and person-centred care principles, Andy explains why behaviours are often attempts to meet unmet needs, reduce stress, find connection, regain purpose, or restore a sense of safety.
Andy introduces a simple but powerful framework that can help caregivers, support workers, healthcare professionals and family members better understand repetitive behaviours.
What exactly is happening? Look for patterns, triggers, locations, times of day and environmental factors.
What emotions might be driving the behaviour? Could the person be feeling frightened, lonely, restless, confused or unsafe?
What unmet need could be sitting underneath the behaviour? Is the person seeking connection, comfort, purpose, food, sensory regulation or reassurance?
What small supportive action can we take that meets the need without confrontation or correction?
This episode is valuable for:
Rather than asking, “How do I stop this behaviour?”, Andy encourages listeners to ask a different question:
“What need is this behaviour trying to meet?”
By shifting from correction to curiosity, caregivers can reduce distress, improve wellbeing, and build more meaningful connections with the people they support.