Author: JDCteam

  • Work with local communities

    Former Department of Health (DH) civil servant Ruth Eley – now chair of the carer involvement group tide (Together in Dementia Everyday) – gave short shrift to the government’s proposed Major Conditions Strategy (MCS), a combined strategy for dementia and five other conditions including cancer and heart disease. While at the DH Eley had a…

  • Reconsidering Dementia books launched

    Open University Press’s “Reconsidering Dementia” series continues to grow with four new books in the pipeline to add to the five books already published.  Books forthcoming next year include Talking with Dementia Reconsidered, by Keith Oliver, Reinhard Guss and Ruth Bartlett, Living with Dementia Reconsidered (IDEAL Project), edited by Linda Clare and colleagues, and Reconsidering…

  • Research priorities

    Research programmes have tended to focus on finding a disease-modifying treatment for Alzheimer’s, but how can we channel more funding into research to improve care and quality of life? Susan Mitchell, head of policy at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said her charity was committed to finding more treatments but that it was important to avoid “unintended…

  • Reports from UKDC 2023

    Aston University in Birmingham played host to the 17th UK Dementia Congress (UKDC) last week (November 7 & 8) when delegates from every corner of the sector came together for a lively and thought-provoking conference and exhibition. Celebration and concern Graham Stokes, from UKDC’s main sponsor HC-One, kicked off the proceedings by reminding the audience…

  • Celebration and concern

    Graham Stokes, from UKDC’s main sponsor HC-One, kicked off the proceedings by reminding the audience of how much had changed in the 30 years since the Journal of Dementia Care was founded. “Over those years we’ve been waiting for the great medical breakthrough on dementia and that’s yet to arrive, but we do now realise…

  • Training is no magic wand

    Is staff training a “magic wand” that miraculously produces results for people living with dementia? The answer from Professor Claire Surr, who gave UKDC’s annual Tom Kitwood Memorial Address, was a firm “No”.  The thrust of her talk on dementia training and education was that effective training is not just a matter of what you…

  • Ground-breaking co-production

    In a ground-breaking master’s degree programme at Bradford University, UKDC’s bronze sponsor, people with dementia have designed, written and partly taught one of the modules. Clare Mason, assistant professor at the university’s Centre for Applied Dementia Studies introduced the “Understanding the Me in Dementia” module, which forms part of the MSc in Advanced Dementia Studies….