Dementia Rarely Comes Alone: A Caregiver's Guide to Managing Multiple Health Conditions

Dementia Rarely Comes Alone: A Caregiver's Guide to Managing Multiple Health Conditions

Dementia is rarely the only diagnosis in the room. Many people living with dementia are also managing high blood pressure, diabetes, arthritis, or heart disease — conditions that may have existed long before memory changes became noticeable, or that develop alongside them. For caregivers, this means the day-to-day isn't just about memory and orientation. It's about coordinating blood pressure checks, insulin timing, joint pain, and a growing list of appointments, often all at once.

With Chronic Disease Awareness Day on July 10 putting a spotlight on the realities of long-term illness, it's a good moment to talk about what happens when cognitive changes and other chronic conditions show up together, and how to make that a little more manageable.


Why This Is So Common

If this feels like a lot, that's because it usually is. In Canada, people living with dementia often live with several other health conditions at once. National data shows that about half already deal with high blood pressure, and roughly a quarter to a third also live with heart disease, a mood disorder, or diabetes.

A closer look across several Canadian provinces found that one-third to one-half of people with dementia have five or more chronic conditions overall, with hypertension and osteoarthritis among the most common. In many cases, conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure were already present well before dementia was diagnosed.

None of this means something is going unusually wrong. It simply reflects how common these combinations are, and why so many caregivers find themselves managing more than memory alone.


The Everyday Challenge: When Routines Collide

In practice, this overlap shows up in small, constant ways. A medication schedule for blood pressure doesn't always line up with insulin timing. One specialist wants a follow-up next month, another wants blood work this week. And when a symptom appears, whether it's confusion, fatigue, or a change in appetite, it's not always obvious which condition is behind it.

Cognitive impairments can make it harder for a loved one to recognize or describe what they're feeling, which puts more of the noticing and connecting on you, the caregiver. 

Is It Dementia, or Something Else?

Sudden confusion, increased agitation, or a noticeable shift in behavior doesn't always mean cognitive changes are progressing. Low blood sugar, dehydration, an infection like a UTI, or even a new medication can produce similar symptoms. When something changes quickly, it's worth mentioning to a doctor rather than assuming it's simply dementia moving forward.


Building Small Systems That Support Everything at Once

You don't need to overhaul everything at once. A few small, consistent systems can make a real difference in juggling multiple conditions alongside dementia.

  • Help your loved one stay oriented in time. The Idem clock helps a person living with dementia keep track of the day itself, supporting the timely actions that keep other conditions in check: mealtimes, medication, hydration reminders, and appointments for doctors, physical therapy, or other specialists.
  • Simplify medication timing. A locking, pre-programmed pill dispenser, such as the Idem Connected Pill Dispenser or the Pippa Tipper, can release the right dose at the right time, reducing the risk of missed or doubled doses when several medications are in rotation.

None of these tools replace medical care, but they can lighten the daily load of remembering, tracking, and coordinating.

Bringing Your Care Team Into the Loop

When several conditions are involved, several specialists usually are too, and they don't always talk to each other. A few habits can help close that gap.

  • Keep one updated list. Note every medication and condition, and bring it to every appointment, no matter which specialist you're seeing.
  • Write down questions ahead of time. It's easy to forget them once you're in the room.
  • Make it easy for your loved one to reach the right person. An adapted phone with photo speed-dial, such as the Raz Memory Cell Phone, the Clarity Amplified Photo Telephone, or the SMPL Adaptive Phone, lets your loved one call a specific doctor, pharmacist, or family member without needing to remember a number.
  • Ask for a central point of contact. The Alzheimer's Society specifically recommends looping in a pharmacist for medication reviews, since they can help make routines simpler and safer.

Being the one who holds all of this together is a real responsibility. Asking for that kind of coordination isn't overstepping. It's exactly the kind of support your loved one needs.

You Don't Have to Hold It All Alone

Dementia rarely comes alone, and neither should you. Managing multiple conditions at once is genuinely a lot, but it's also something families navigate successfully every day, one small system, one appointment, one conversation at a time. You don't need to have it all figured out today. Building a few steady routines now can make tomorrow's challenges a little more manageable.

Sources: Statistics Canada; Government of Canada, Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada (2025); Alzheimer's Society (UK).