Greeff, Oppel Bernhardt Wilhelm2009-11-262009-11-262009-09Greeff, OBW 2009, 'Alzheimer's disease in family practice', South African Family Practice, vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 364, 366-367. [www.safpj.co.za]1726-426Xhttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/1204621 September 2009 is hailed as World Alzheimer's Day, creating awareness for the most common type of all the dementias. Senile dementia of the Alzheimer's type (SDAT) has a four to five year survival rate if a patient is living in the community and a much shorter survival rate for institutionalised patients. The family practitioner is often consulted first by family members who seek advice for a family member with suspected dementia and possibly Alzheimer's disease. Although a multi-disciplinary team approach is mostly needed, the family practitioner will in most cases co-ordinate referrals and advise family members on practical nursing aspects and decisions about institutionalisation. This article gives a short overview on SDAT, a classification of drugs used in dementia and a treatment approach to Alzheimer-specific pharmacotherapy.en© 2009. The Author. Licensee: OpenJournals Publishing. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License.World Alzheimer's DayAlzheimer's disease -- Patients -- CareSenile dementia -- ChemotherapyInmates of institutionsFamily nursingAlzheimer’s disease in family practiceArticle