Sunday 2 December 2012

Dementia Friends

Million 'dementia friends' wanted for training



Health secretary Jeremy Hunt launched the 'dementia friends' scheme in central London



The government wants to train a million people in England by 2015 to become "dementia friends", able to spot signs of the illness and help sufferers.

It is part of plans to raise awareness of the condition, which affects nearly 700,000 people in England.

Prime Minister David Cameron has said dementia is a national crisis and awareness of it is "shockingly low".

The number of people with dementia is expected to double in the next 30 years because more people are living longer.

The government is launching the Dementia Friends scheme, which has been adapted from a similar programme in Japan that recruited three million volunteers.

 

Dementia signs


  • Struggling to remember recent events
  • Problems following conversations
  • Forgetting the names of friends or objects
  • Repeating yourself
  • Problems with thinking or reasoning
  • Confusion in familiar places

Sessions in workplaces and town halls across the country will explain what dementia is, what it is like to have the condition and what people can do to help if they meet someone with the symptoms.

It is hoped that charities, businesses and the wider public will get involved.
'Shocking'
The prime minister said: "We cannot underestimate the challenge we face in dealing with dementia in our country."

He has already promised to double the research budget for the disease to £66m by 2015.

"There are already nearly 700,000 sufferers in England alone, but less than half are diagnosed and general awareness about the condition is shockingly low.

"Through the Dementia Friends project we will for the first time make sure a million people know how to spot those tell-tale signs and provide support.


Dementia school


At Swanhurst Secondary School in Birmingham, a class of 14 year old girls are about to meet a couple coping with the devastating toll taken by dementia.
Ruby Jones was a midwife and nurse. Now she needs constant care, provided by her husband Emerson. He tells the girls how it is a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week commitment.
He has to help her get dressed, remind her to eat, answer her repeated questions. Ruby herself tells the girls that the condition has totally changed their life.
This is part of a national project in schools in England to raise awareness among young people of dementia. Ruby and Emerson did their best to answer the questions posed by the girls.
No one left the class room in any doubt that life after a diagnosis of dementia can be very tough for both the patient and the carer.


Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, said he wanted the country to be "one of the best" places for dementia care in Europe.

He said: "Too many people with dementia feel cut off, lonely and fearful without the support and understanding they need."

"People with dementia and their carers should never feel barred from everyday activities like shopping for groceries or spending time with friends.

"We are putting in place plans to make next year a year of raising awareness of dementia."

Dementia Friends will be given a forget-me-not badge. The scheme will cost £2.4m.

The chief executive of the Alzheimer's Society, Jeremy Hughes, said: "We want to rally a million people behind the cause of helping make a better life for people with dementia.

"I am confident we will not only meet this target but beat it. Dementia is everyone's problem and we all need to be part of the solution."

Dr Eric Karran, director of research at Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "At a cost of £23bn a year to the UK economy, we all agree that dementia is not a problem we can ignore. Finding treatments for Alzheimer's and other dementias is no easy task, but it's one we must tackle if we are to make a real difference to people's lives."




Can this work or will it lead to problems for those with the illness


While this is a good idea, I confess that in today's society there are many unscrupulous people who will take advantage of those with the illness unless safeguards are in place. I was told that these buddies would be given an hours training by the Society Staff, but that seems to be all thats happening. Is an hour really enough to be able to spot dementia in a friend or relative, I don't think so.

Considering there are well over 120 variations of dementia where do you start? and just how do you tell if someone has this or if they are simply struggling to cope with the daily pressures.
It also worries me that many other illness minc dementia in one way or another so just how can someone like this be expected to decide if someone has dementia or not.

In most voluntary roles these days we here that people need to be CRB checked to ensure thay are not criminals or have a very dodgy background, so are these people being CRB checked.

I would have thought that people with dementia would make good buddies, as they have the illness and are therefore in a better position than staff to decide what the person needs, after all they have usually been through the diagnosis proceedure, and have managed to get control over their lives again.

Many staff simply get people with the illness to attend meetings or clubs but not all encourage people to carry on with hobbies or stay active in the community, where as someone who has been diagnosed can should what can be done, with or without support.


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