Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Women religious attend the plenary assembly of the International Union of Superior Generals in Rome May 3, 2022. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

ROME (CNS) -- Having a member over 100 years old is not unusual today for orders of Catholic women religious, but many orders do not have the specialized knowledge or resources to ensure an accurate diagnosis and the best possible plan of care for sisters experiencing dementia or other forms of cognitive impairment, several sisters said.

Sister Jane Wakahiu, a member of the Little Sisters of St. Francis and head of the Catholic Sisters Initiative at the Hilton Foundation, announced May 9 that the foundation was providing $5 million to help launch the Catholic Sisters Cognitive Impairment-Alzheimer’s Global Initiative, a project of the International Union of Superiors General and the U.S. Leadership Conference of Women Religious.

“Our elderly and infirm sisters are a source of inspiration and wisdom, of living fidelity to religious life entirely. On their shoulders we stand,” Sister Wakahiu said.

“Our elderly and infirm sisters are a source of inspiration and wisdom, of living fidelity to religious life entirely. On their shoulders we stand,” Sister Wakahiu said at an afternoon conference at the UISG headquarters and online.

Having aging sisters in the community is a blessing, not a problem, she said, so the sisters want to do everything possible to make sure their older members have a physically, spiritually and mentally healthy old age.One of the greatest challenges, Sister Wakahiu said, is caring for sisters with Alzheimer’s disease and “its gradual theft of our sisters’ consciousness and capacity. As each patient is unique in their diagnosis, medication and therapy, we need to be attentive. This initiative will provide resources to congregations and conferences (of religious) for education, training, assessment and direct service.”

Sister Peter Lillian Di Maria, a member of the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm and director of the Avila Institute of Gerontology in Germantown, New York, provided conference participants with an introduction to caring for those with cognitive impairment.

Having aging sisters in the community is a blessing, not a problem.

The most important thing is “educating ourselves about cognitive impairment, dementia and especially Alzheimer’s disease, which is the most common cause of dementia,” she said. But it also is essential to remember that dementia is different from “age-associated memory loss” and a slowing down of problem-solving or other mental processes, which do not interfere with a person’s ability to function.

Care must include “continually assessing the person for what they can continue to do and what modifications we might make to help them remain independent or as independent as possible,” she said. In addition, congregations must train those who care for and live with the person.

As the sisters develop the program further, they will work with the Washington-based Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate in surveying religious congregations of women about their experience and needs in caring for sisters with dementia.

The latest from america

Blessed Carlo Acutis offers a counterexample for our digital age: a teenager who embraced technology not as an escape, but as a tool for communion—with others, and with God.
Grace LenahanJune 06, 2025
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney attends an event at the Liberal Party election night headquarters in Ottawa April 29, 2025. (OSV News photo/Jennifer Gauthier, Reuters)
“Carney is responding to the [immigration] backlash but also to the Trump effect, which is placing more pressure on Canada to tighten its border.”
Grace CoppsJune 06, 2025
The war in Gaza has become one in which “the heart-rending price is being paid by children, the elderly and the sick.” Israel, along with its allies, especially including the United States, must reckon that cost as well.
The EditorsJune 06, 2025
But as Catholic women, we are called to embrace our bodies, with all their changes—hormonal or otherwise—and not to hide from what they reveal at different stages.
LuElla D'AmicoJune 06, 2025