“…Even in these circumstances, support was provided to enable people with this level of disability to start and continue daily tasks themselves by making changes to daily necessities to support cognitive impairment, ascertaining the person's toileting rhythms and eating rhythms and enabling them to enjoy the experience of deliciousness and warmth when starting daily tasks, rather than simply assisting their action for each stage of the process. The self‐esteem of people with dementia tends to be adversely affected when ADL become difficult due to the effect of cognitive impairment (Dos Santos, Rocha, Fernandez, de Padua, & Reppold, ; Suwa, Otani, Tsujimura, Nogawa, & Shiya, ). However, care using not only the first factor, “Explain the process in the order of each individual action: explain the order of actions that comprise one activity of daily life and specifically show those actions,” but also the second factor, “Prevent non‐starts and interruptions: devise techniques in advance to ensure activities of daily life are not non‐started or interrupted,” enables the person to execute ADL, which may also maintain or improve their self‐esteem.…”