Showing posts with label dementia care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dementia care. Show all posts

Monday, 6 July 2015

The Doctor’s dementia review: ‘You live with dementia, you don’t suffer it’

Facebook is useful, and singing helps … Jennifer Bute

It takes one hell of a woman to burst out laughing at the thought of her own torturous hallucinations of ringing phones, babies crying and typewriter keys tapping. Dr Jennifer Bute is that woman. In The Doctor’s Dementia (Radio 4), Jennifer tells the no-nonsense story of what it is like to live with her condition. She was in her late 50s and working as a busy GP when she noticed she was becoming forgetful, a symptom she blamed on getting older.

But Jennifer was diagnosed with dementia – and realised her condition was deteriorating when she left her internet shopping delivery on the hob and instinctively turned on the four “twirly things”. The plastic packaging melted while she watched. “It was only when the bananas exploded that I was brought to my senses,” she says.

Although it’s unimaginably hard for Jennifer to go from lecturing “off the hoof” to batting off an attack by an imaginary swarm of bees, her refusal to become a victim is a breath of fresh air. You instinctively trust her when she says dementia is a challenge, not the end of the world or a death sentence. Yes, she’s a doctor, but she’s also speaking up for herself and many others in the same situation.

“I discovered when people found out I had dementia they avoided me,” she explains. “They don’t know what to say.” So she produced leaflets for her children and friends to help them cope. And when she realised she couldn’t find her way home, she bought a satnav.
It’s a practical approach to dementia, and a reminder that life goes on for the person involved. Little strategies go a long way. She finds Facebook useful as it involves short sentences and a picture of the person she’s interacting with, making it easier to remember who they are. Singing also helps. “It’s like a workout,” she says.



Monday, 15 June 2015

‘Dementia is something that affects a great many families’


Support is growing for our campaign to make Wells a Dementia Friendly City.


The police, care professionals and the Bishop of Bath and Wells have all come on board.
“I’m pleased to be the patron of the City of Wells Dementia project and commend the people and businesses locally for embracing this worthy cause,” said Bishop Peter Hancock.
“Dementia is something that affects a great many families and it is something my wife Jane and I have experienced in our own family life.
“The more we can all understand then the better we will all be able to support those who suffer from dementia and their families.”

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Daring skydive in aid of Dementia UK

Gipsey Bridge Academy pupils have been raising money for Dementia UK. Pupils L-R Rosa Abram 4, Jordan Langley 6, Cain Nicholls 7, Sophie Holland 8, Karis Greene 7, Harry Self 9, Kady Synyer 10, Grace Lunn 11 - school council, and parent Mrs Sally Elms who is going to do a skydive to raise money for Dementia UK.



A plucky parent is planning to leap 10,000ft out of a plane to raise money for a charity close to her heart.

Mum-of-two Sally Elms, of Kirton Holme, will take to the skies over Peterborough in June to support Dementia UK.

“As a Dementia friend I am trying to raise awareness of this cruel, progressive disease by doing a tandem skydive on June 20,” said Sally, 49.

“Dementia UK is a charity close to my heart after 
having my mum diagnosed 
several years ago with 
vascular dementia and also losing an uncle to Alzheimer’s just over a year ago.”

Read more...

 

Wednesday, 20 May 2015

What can you do to prevent dementia?

Judi Dench in Iris, in which she plays the novelist Iris Murdoch, who struggled with dementia


It’s a condition that could strike any one of us, and there is still no cure. But evidence suggests that changing your lifestyle can help to reduce your risk

The longer we live, the more likely we are to develop dementia. Of all the myriad conditions that accompany old age, it is the one that tends to terrify us most. One in six people over 80 have the condition, with impaired cognitive function (usually memory loss) and at least one other significant problem with language, spatial awareness or function. Treatments exist, but they often have little or no effect and, despite reports last week that US researchers have found a possible cause, there is still no cure.

Read more...

 

Friday, 3 October 2014

GPs offered £200 payment for each newly diagnosed dementia patient

GP practices are being offered £200 payments for each dementia patient they diagnose, and provide post-diagnostic support to, under a scheme to shift more care into the community.

The three-year local enhanced service - offered to practices by NHS Bristol CCG - also offers practices a a £500 upfront payment for signing up to the LES and a £200 ‘bonus’ payment for practices to increase their diagnosis rates by 5%, or reach a target of 65% of expected diagnoses.

NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens called recently for a ‘step change’ in diagnosis in order to meet the Government’s objective of ensuring two-thirds of people with dementia have a formal diagnosis by next year.

But GPs have found objections from patients and increased waiting times at memory clinics due to the controversial dementia case-finding DES in England.

A spokesperson for NHS Bristol CCG told Pulse the scheme was set up to support general practice taking on more dementia care from specialists, by providing extra resources for diagnosing patients with uncomplicated dementia and reviewing their care, while complex cases are still referred to memory clinic.



Tuesday, 8 July 2014

Technology could help people with dementia remain in their homes

Voting for dementia in the Longitude Prize could help revolutionise care.
Toyota care robots


Dementia affects an increasing number of people: in 2012, 800,000 people in the UK had a form of dementia. The cost to the British economy, estimated at £23bn a year by the Alzheimer's Society, is now greater than cancer, strokes and heart disease combined. Finding a solution that can both alleviate the pressures on society and allow people with dementia to live with dignity is crucial; this is why it should win the public vote to decide the focus of the Longitude prize 2014.

Recent stories in the media about the quality of care provided to the elderly have highlighted that there is still a lack of understanding and even empathy when caring for those with dementia. The Care Quality Commission has shown that care across England is patchy at best and in need of improvement. With the NHS struggling to cope with increasing numbers of people with dementia, a greater burden is being placed on the role of family carers in providing support.

Tuesday, 27 May 2014

Breakthrough in the battle against dementia as protein offers new hope for patients


The breakthrough could lead to new treatments – and even ways of preventing the killer ­disease in the first place.

With at least 820,000 Britons ­diagnosed with a form of dementia, ways to beat it are desperately being sought.

The latest study centres on a protein that appears to stop the build-up of toxic plaques that ravage the brain of Alzheimer’s sufferers.

The American research was led by Professor Joel Buxbaum.

He said: “This result was completely unexpected when we started.

“But now we realise that it could indicate a new approach for Alzheimer’s prevention and therapy.”

The protein is commonly found in the liver, where its presence tends to be more hazardous than beneficial.



Wednesday, 5 March 2014

Alzheimer's disease health centre

Dementia care improvements.
69x75_alzheimers_drugs_guidance
The government has announced improvements in dementia care in England, including faster diagnosis and more research funding.
NHS England will invest £90 million with the aim of diagnosing two-thirds of people with dementia by March 2015.
Of the 800,000 people living with dementia, the Alzheimer's Society says less than half have the diagnosis they need to get support, information and potential treatments.
In some areas it currently takes up to 25 weeks to carry out diagnostic assessments for dementia, while other manage this in 6 weeks on average.

Monday, 17 February 2014

Where Memories Go is a tender portrait by Sally Magnusson of her mum’s frustration with dementia

Where Memories Go details a mother's frustration with dementia

Do the words ‘to lose a parent’ mean something different to the children of dementia sufferers?

Mamie Baird Magnusson died in April, 2012, aged 86. Her children had already been grappling with her loss for more than a decade. The warm, sparky, strong and inquisitive woman who had piloted their lives had gradually receded from view as dementia dimmed her sharp mind.

In her place was a frail old lady, in need of round-the-clock care, whose frustration at her failure to comprehend the world around her sometimes manifested itself in anger, even anguish.

For those who had known her, dementia seemed a particularly cruel end-of-life sentence for a woman whose lively intellect had been her passport to success. Mamie Baird had been a star writer on the Scottish Daily Express.

The joke when she married her junior colleague Magnus Magnusson – who would later find fame as the original Mastermind inquisitor – was that he was after her job.

‘She loved words and taught her children to cherish them, too,’ writes her broadcaster daughter, Sally. ‘Then, little by little, she lost them.’

Monday, 13 January 2014

Dementia cases flood A&E units


CARE services are “collapsing” as the number of dementia sufferers being taken to accident and emergency has soared by 64 per cent over the past five years, health critics claimed last night.

A Sunday Express inquiry shows 600 emergency admissions or readmissions are being made every day for people with dementia. The numbers have spiralled at an alarming rate with 219,064 admitted in 2011/12 compared with 133,373 in 2007/08.

George McNamara, head of policy at the Alzheimer’s Society, said: “This is very worrying. Demands on social ­services mean many local authorities are now only providing crisis or high-level support rather than proper care and prevention.

“This has led to a growing crisis in which emergency services are becoming default rather than a last resort. Financially this is unsustainable.”

Shadow Health ­Secretary Andy Burnham said: “Many ­vulnerable older people have seen home care taken away or are paying much higher charges for care.”



Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Improving dementia care: ask those who have lived with the illness

Improving dementia care: ask those who have lived with the illness.

Personal experiences are often ignored by the social care system, but professionals can learn a lot from patients and their families.

Older woman talking 

An understanding of what dementia is really like both for the individual and their family is often missed in care training.
Dementia care training is a competitive marketplace, populated mostly by people from academic and scientific backgrounds. They can tell you the statistics, what the latest research has discovered, and the widely recognised methods we should all be following when we provide care to a person with dementia.

What is often missed is the understanding about what dementia is really like – both for the individual and their family.

I'm not an academic. University wasn't an option for me; my dad needed me and there was nowhere else I was going to be other than by his side. He lived with vascular dementia for 19 years, going 10 years without a diagnosis and then spending nine years in three different care homes. Dad's dementia began when I was just 12 years old, and went on to dominate my teens and twenties. He passed away in 2012 aged 85.

Read more...

Listen to an interview with Richard White, Stanfield Nursing Home's owner, about music therapy and dementia


Dementia map is a 'step in the right direction'

A proposed map showing the quality of dementia care around the country could help drive up standards, according to the Alzheimer's Society.

Its director of external affairs, Alison Cook, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme:
This map is a step in the right direction, because naming those areas of the country who aren't doing very well and pointing in the direction of areas which are doing very well means that they can copy best practice and just get on with making people have access to a diagnosis.
– Alison Cook, Alzheimer's Society

She said that just being diagnosed can help patients by providing access to advice, social care and by enabling them to plan for their future.

Read more.... 
 

Monday, 18 November 2013

Terrible toll of those affected by dementia


More should be done to help those affected by Alzheimer 039 s

Conditions such as Alzheimer’s are a scourge of modern times as more and more of us live to a great age thanks to medical advances.

Nobody reading her account of the strain her 84-year-old father is under as his wife’s full time carer can think our society provides sufficient support to affected families.

One day scientists will find effective medical remedies. Until they do the challenge for politicians is to find a way to take some of the load off families unfortunate enough to be directly hit.


Being bilingual could slow down dementia and have a better effect that strong drugs

- Study suggests that being bilingual exercises the mind
- May have a stronger effect on dementia than traditional drugs
- Bilingual patients tended to develop dementia later in life
- Positive effect of being bilingual held even if a person was illiterate

Speaking a second language may delay dementia by up to five years – more than powerful drugs, researchers say.

A study suggests being bilingual exercises the mind, so it has greater reserves when disease takes hold.
But there are no additional advantages to speaking any more than two languages, according to the study in the journal Neurology.

An elderly woman suffering from Alzheimer's disease

Read more.... 

Listen to an interview with Richard White, Stanfield Nursing Home's owner, about music therapy and dementia

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

The lastest news from Stanfield Nursing Home.

During this month Ruth one of our residents achieved her 100th Birthday.  She celebrated in style with her family, and gave an incredibly lively speech. Ruth joins Jenny, another resident, who is 101 and looking forward to her 102nd Birthday soon.  Congratulations!

Yvonne, one of the home's activities leads has commenced planning the Christmas programme with our residents, and following this it seems we are going to be themed Gold and Red this year. Given plenty of stimulation and time our residents take the lead in how their home is managed for them.


Thursday, 4 July 2013

Stanfield Nursing Home's News

Recently there have been many exciting pieces of news at Stanfield Nursing Home.

Firstly, we would like to congratulate our staff on the completion of their training. Stanfield Nursing Home have been working closely with Aspiration Training of Bromsgrove for the last five years to help develop the staff's knowledge. Recently Max, Veronica, Loren, and Abbie have all passed their xx in social care.

Secondly, Malvern District Council have approved plans to add another seven specialist care bedrooms to the home. A local company, One Creative Design Ltd, have been working closely with Stanfield Nursing Home and Theresa Atkinson of Worcester University's Association of Dementia, to achieve the very best environment for the residents.

The Queen has been contacted again as another of our residents moves closer to celebrating her 100th
birthday, family plans are arranged for the party and the Home will be organising series of events during the day for all residents.

Wimbledon celebrations are happening in Stanfield Nursing Home with strawberries and cream! Six of our residents are enjoying Wimbledon to the full and enjoying afternoon teas of strawberries and cream during the fortnight.