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Becoming Dementia-Friendly 38 th BCCPA Annual Conference Maria Howard, MBA, CCRC Chief Executive Officer Barbara Lindsay Director, Advocacy & Education.

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Presentation on theme: "Becoming Dementia-Friendly 38 th BCCPA Annual Conference Maria Howard, MBA, CCRC Chief Executive Officer Barbara Lindsay Director, Advocacy & Education."— Presentation transcript:

1 Becoming Dementia-Friendly 38 th BCCPA Annual Conference Maria Howard, MBA, CCRC Chief Executive Officer Barbara Lindsay Director, Advocacy & Education Alzheimer Society of B.C.

2 Help for Today. Hope for Tomorrow… ® Alzheimer Society of B.C.

3 Dementia in B.C. More than 70,000 people in B.C. are currently living with Alzheimer’s disease or another dementia. Of these, 10,000 are under the age of 65. More than 177,684 British Columbians will be living with the disease in 30 years.

4 Dementia is the most common condition present in long-term care homes. Organizations matter

5 Dementia-friendly organizations Provide person- centered care to people living with dementia to be respectful of dignity. Support people with dementia to be engaged to the fullest extent possible.

6 Why become dementia-friendly? Create social and built spaces that are stimulating. Make people with dementia feel accepted. Provide a tailored and optimal level of care. Take small actions that mean a big difference.

7 What is a dementia-friendly social space? A space where people… Have respect for a person living with dementia. Make a person with dementia feel accepted. Focus on a person’s strengths and abilities. Support meaningful social engagement.

8 What might not be true about dementia?

9 Myths about dementia Dementia is not… Strictly a genetic disorder. A disease that only affects older people. Normal aging/memory loss. Preventable. Curable. Caused by aluminum.

10 Dementia disease does not mean… The end of a meaningful life. That a person cannot understand what is going on around them. That a person will become violent or aggressive. Myths about dementia

11 What can a dementia-friendly care setting look like? Link to Video

12 is one in which services understand what M.S., a caregiver in B.C. “A dementia-friendly setting dementia is and how to communicate with people who have the diagnosis. It is a place that has meaningful activities that my husband could easily access, and comfortably participate in. It is an understanding community in which having dementia is not a stigma, but where my husband can feel like he is a contributing, participating member of society for as long as possible.”

13 How is the Society supporting dementia- friendliness?

14 Collaborating with the Alzheimer Society of B.C.

15 15 Information Bulletins  In Touch for caregivers.  Insight for people with dementia.  First Link ® Bulletin.  eContact newsletter for Society news. Support Groups  For people with early symptoms.  For caregivers. Alzheimer Resource Centres  For information, education, support services and referrals. Education  Heads Up: An Introduction to Brain Health  Getting to Know Dementia  Shaping the Journey: Living with Dementia®  Family Caregiver Series  Additional Workshops  Tele-Workshops Alzheimer Society of B.C.

16 Brainstorming Questions 1.If you had to move to a care facility, what would you like your environment to look like? 2.What would be meaningful for your organization to do to become dementia-friendly? How to create change in your organization?

17 Building capacity in your organization Improve staff knowledge. Adopt dementia-friendly policies and practices. Engage staff at all levels of your organization. Involve staff in deciding on environmental modifications.

18 Creating dementia- friendly environments Person- centered philosophy Committed leadership Engaged managerial support Skilled healthcare providers and staff Appropriately designed physical settings Supportive social environment

19 Four possible places to start 1.Observe and have walking conversations with residents to see how they experience the environment. 2.Ask staff if there are design features that make their work easier and/or harder. 3.See if lighting is adequate – wear sunglasses one day at work! 4.Review signage – colour contrast, large lettering, realistic and descriptive images.

20 For more information about Dementia-Friendly Communities please contact the Alzheimer Society of B.C. at 1-800-667-3742 Thank You!


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