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ALZHEIMER’S ORGANISATIONS AGENTS OF CHANGE

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Presentation on theme: "ALZHEIMER’S ORGANISATIONS AGENTS OF CHANGE"— Presentation transcript:

1 ALZHEIMER’S ORGANISATIONS AGENTS OF CHANGE
GLENN REES, CEO ADI CONFERENCE, LONDON 2012

2 ALZHEIMER’S ORGANISATIONS 10 YEARS OF CHANGE

3 DECADE OF CHANGE NATIONAL Documenting the dementia epidemic
Quality of dementia care INTERNATIONAL Worldwide dementia epidemic Developing countries

4 TIME FOR REVOLUTION? NEGATIVE SOCIAL ATTITUDES ENDURE Stereotyping
Loss of rights Stigma Social isolation HEALTH POLICY FAILS Not recognised as a chronic disease Treated as a natural part of ageing

5 TIME FOR REVOLUTION? The framework for development of dementia policy
Evidence base for our revolution Communications and the use of social media

6 BUILDING BLOCKS FOR DEMENTIA POLICY
PUBLIC HEALTH FRAMEWORK MAKE DEMENTIA A NATIONAL HEALTH PRIORITY EVIDENCE BASE: SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACT

7 A PUBLIC HEALTH FRAMEWORK
AGED CARE HEALTH POLICY DEMENTIA Awareness Timely diagnosis Support and care Risk reduction Research

8 AWARENESS LIMITED UNDERSTANDING Symptoms beyond memory loss
Affects younger people Common cause of death Symptoms develop decades before diagnosis Risk reduction

9 AWARENESS Greater awareness and understanding of legal rights
Maintain autonomy and self-determination

10 TIMELY DIAGNOSIS Only 20-50% of people living with dementia are recognised in primary care Up to 80% of people with dementia do not yet have a diagnosis 3.1 years from symptoms to diagnosis in Australia A diagnosis of dementia often comes as a relief

11 SUPPORT AND CARE In Australia, 70% of dementia care is provided by the family RECOMMENDATIONS Consumer directed models of care Equitable and sustainable charges End of life care, advance care planning and palliative care Entitlement to services based on need Access to information and link workers Community services and respite Development of outcome standards

12 SUPPORT AND CARE: CARING FOR OLDER AUSTRALIANS REPORT
ALZHEIMER’S AUSTRALIA IS ADVOCATING FOR Extra funding for dementia care Flexible and suitable respite Culturally appropriate dementia care Support for Younger Onset Dementia Co-ordination between Aged Care and Mental Health Systems

13 CONSUMER DIRECTED CARE
Care planning Budget holding Service delivery The revolution: Empower the consumer

14 ACUTE CARE QUALITY OF CARE IN HOSPITALS
People with dementia stay longer in hospitals Greater risk of hazards and poor outcomes May be more appropriately treated in alternative settings

15 PREVENTION: DIFFERING VIEWS
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH Not enough rigorous scientific evidence Uncertainty about direction More research needed ALZHEIMER’S AUSTRALIA Good evidence for vascular risk factors No harm in advocating healthier lifestyles Not expensive

16 50% OF AUSTRALIANS DO NOT KNOW THAT THEY MAY BE ABLE TO REDUCE THEIR RISK OF DEMENTIA.

17 iPhone application developed by Alzheimer’s Australia with Bupa
Over 170,000 downloads (5th Feb 2012) Downloaded in over 82 countries Android version in development

18 RESEARCH Dementia is the third leading cause of death in Australia behind heart disease and stroke But Government funding for dementia research falls behind far behind the other major diseases National Health and Medical Research Council funding for research on main chronic disease’s ( ).

19 RESEARCH IS AS IMPORTANT AS SERVICES AND SUPPORT IN ADVOCACY
Less than 0.5% of the cost of dementia care is spent on dementia research in Australia

20 SO WHERE NOW? We know what needs to be done
Passion and effective communication Advocacy through story-telling

21 STORYTELLING MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS Marketing and branding strategy
Fight Dementia Campaign

22 FIGHT DEMENTIA CAMPAIGN
PARLIAMENT HOUSE AUSTRALIA, 13 OCTOBER, 2011

23 New BrandING

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27 SOCIAL MEDIA HIGH PROFILE PRESIDENT INNOVATIVE WEBSITE

28 VALENTINE’S DAY: WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOUR LOVED ONE COULDN’T REMEMBER YOU?

29 REVOLUTION We have the evidence National plans have shown the way
Consumers must be empowered Communication, communication, communication Be positive

30 time for action


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