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Dementia Care - a Forward View and a note on the Nottinghamshire Healthcare Strategy Professor Martin Orrell Director, Institute of Mental Health 1
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High hopes for drugs…. 2
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Person-centred care Choice and autonomy Life experiences Quality of life Needs being met Optimising function Activities Psychosocial aspects of dementia - not just a brain disorder 3
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and the future…… Faster diagnosis with guaranteed quality of care Less stigma and people live more active lives Better psychosocial interventions Coaching to maintain abilities in the community Making technology and the arts more useful and meaningful Better crisis support to maintain people at home Better physical health and fewer falls (Harwood) Better support for carers BETTER CARE & SUPPORT PROVIDER OF CHOICE 4
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Memory Services National Accreditation Programme 110 members A heterogeneous mix Widespread across UK Reduced waiting time Improving quality Improved satisfaction Better funding for training 5
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Longitudinal changes in lifestyle, cognition and ageing Impact of changing lifestyles on cognition and ADL Economic models of social and lifestyle changes Prevalence of dementia Developing and piloting the social intervention Consensus process/PPI Social intervention manual 3 Sessions - dementia advice worker Pilot/feasibility work Qualitative data Adherence/implementation work Social and personal constructs of dementia Comparison with other chronic conditions Lived experience of memory problems with focused observations in practice Promoting Independence in Dementia (PRIDE) ESRC/NIHR 6
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Multicentre, pragmatic, single blind randomised controlled trial of the social intervention Memory services Clinical and cost effectiveness Fidelity Checklist Qualitative study Career development and capacity building INTERDEM Academy ESRC Doctoral Training Centre - 3 PhD studentships Expert workshops/seminars Interdisciplinary mentoring GREAT PLACE TO WORK Florianopolis study Brazil Epidemiological study Adapting and piloting the social intervention 7
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Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (CST) for dementia Cognitive and social activities in group or with family carer Easy to deliver using standard manuals & DVD CST principles also useful in practice Good evidence for benefits to cognition and quality of life (Spector et al., 2003; NICE, 2006, Woods et al., 2012; World Alzheimer Report ADI, 2011; Orrell et al., 2014). Cost effective (Knapp et al 2006) and savings to NHS of potentially £54 million/year (Institute for Innovation 2011). BETTER VALUE & USED ACROSS TRUST Works well with cholinesterase inhibitors Used in 80% of UK memory services and in 21 countries CST website: www.cstdementia.comwww.cstdementia.com 8
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Based on successful OT intervention in Netherlands Randomised controlled trial 135 people > 65 with mild/moderate dementia with 10 sessions of OT over 5 weeks Cognitive and behavioural interventions, carer coping behaviours and supervision Process and performance skills improved (AMPS/IDDD) Carer burden reduced and competence improved Cost effective (Graff et al. 2006, 2008) To adapt, develop, evaluate in a large national clinical trial To promote independence, meaningful activity and quality of life For people with dementia and their carers living in the community 9
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Carer support and case management START programme - manual based coping strategy improved mood and quality of life for carers of people with dementia. Livingston et al., 2013. Systematic review: case management in dementia - 13 clinical trials - At 18 months follow up reduced admissions to care homes, reduced BPSD, and improved carer depression and quality of life. Reilly et al., 2015 10
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multi-disciplinary, intersectorial educational research framework for Europe to improve technology and care for people with dementia 11
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TANDEM - The Arts and Dementia-Doctoral Training Centre Strong interest from people with dementia and their carers in arts-based activities Evidence needed to shape the development and delivery of arts interventions for people with dementia in community and care settings Living well with dementia Advancing knowledge about the impact of engagement with creative activities on people with all stages of dementia and on their family and professional carers. BETTER CARE & SUPPORT 12
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Causes of crises and appropriate interventions: views of people with dementia, carers and professionals. Specialist home care was highly valued by all groups. Hazards in home (gas, electricity, cooking) were concern for carers and people with dementia. Interventions such as equipment/adaptations assistive technology were valued to help prevent or manage a crisis. Family carer education/ training and support groups for carers in crisis (carer burden and mental ill health). Staff often suggested more intensive interventions eg crisis visits Carers and people with dementia often prefer the less resource intensive approaches. 13
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Managing crises in dementia Specialist home care was highly valued Hazards in home (gas, electricity, cooking) were concern for carers and people with dementia. Family carer education/ training and support groups for carers Staff often suggested more intensive interventions eg crisis visits Carers and people with dementia often prefer the less resource intensive approaches - equipment/adaptations assistive technology. AQUEDUCT study – improve management of crises in dementia and increase quality of UK crisis teams GREAT PLACE TO WORK & BEST VALUE 14
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Thank you 15
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