MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Don’t forget Yarra Ranges dementia sufferers

>> MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Love amid loss as dementia takes hold

FRIGHTENING new statistics reveal the number of residents in the Yarra Ranges with dementia is expected to skyrocket by 298 per cent by 2050.

The figures, commissioned by Alzheimers Australia Vic, project the number of Yarra Ranges residents living with dementia will grow from 1543 to more than 6000 in less than 40 years, placing a heavy toll on the districts medical and care services.

The shock figures come as Caladenia Dementia Care in Mooroolbark campaigns for $1.7 million funding to build a dementia-specific overnight respite centre.

Manager Sarah Yeates said there was an enormous and growing need for the centre.

The care that happens in nursing homes is just not suitable for people with dementia, especially for those in the early stages, Ms Yeates said.

She said they were seeing an increasing demand for their services particularly from younger people, with their youngest patient just 34.

The community has already raised $85,000 for the project, but Ms Yeates said they were continuing to appeal for funding from state and federal governments.

Among those who will benefit from respite care is Coldstreams Gerda and Marty De Clercq (pictured).

Two-and-a-half years ago Mr De Clercq, 68, was diagnosed with dementia and his wife is his sole carer.

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MULTIMEDIA SPECIAL: Don't forget Yarra Ranges dementia sufferers

Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer’s and dementia

FORT MYERS, FL -

Hank Graefen's mother-in-law suffered from dementia. When he and his wife became caretakers in her final years, they studied up on the condition.

"The more you can learn the better you're going to be and you better understand the disease."

Often used interchangeably, both dementia and Alzheimer's are forms of mental degradation. In many ways they seem the same but are actually two different medical terms.

"I tell people that its sort of like dementia is the team and Alzheimer's is one of the players," says Dr. Michael Raab, a geriatrician with Lee Memorial Health System.

Dementia covers a number of disorders; Alzheimer's is most common.

"Depending on who you believe, between 60% and 80% are caused by Alzheimer's disease," says Dr. Raab.

Alzheimer's has physical characteristics in the brain, which most other forms of dementia don't have.

"When you look at the brain, there are tangles and plaques. The Lewy Body dementias, the vascular dementias, the front dementias, none of them really have any plaques or tangles," says Dr. Raab.

What's more, Alzheimer's involves a gradual progression that can begin in middle age. General dementia is usually found in advanced years, Hank's mother-in-law was in her 90s.

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Health Matters: Differences between Alzheimer's and dementia

Nationwide dementia screening to tackle ‘crisis’ among elderly

Screening will also be introduced into the NHS health check programme for people aged 40 to 74.

Mr Lansley told the Daily Mail: When you talk to people about their concerns for the future, its evident that dementia is a bigger concern even than having cancer.

We are looking for early diagnosis where physiological signs might not be as easy to pick up.

We are increasingly able to support people with early diagnosis to sustain their memory and their overall mental agility.

Sufferers of dementia, which causes the mind to deteriorate, currently fill a quarter of all hospital beds.

Health ministers are also concerned that the 19 billion cost of treating Britains 67,000 dementia patients every year is higher than that of treating cancer, heart disease or stroke sufferers.

Alzheimer's Disease is the most common cause of dementia and the most feared complaint among people over the age of 55 in the UK, behind cancer and stroke. However, only one in four people with the illness are diagnosed.

As the NHS struggles with this cost, Mr Cameron plans to improve research on living with dementia and fund a new academic centre for scientists to investigate the causes of the condition.

He also wants to encourage people to volunteer for brain scanning to help identify the signs of early onset.

We did it with cancer in the 70s. With HIV in the 80s and 90s, he will say. We fought the stigma, stepped up to the challenge and made massive inroads into fighting these killers.

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Nationwide dementia screening to tackle 'crisis' among elderly

Commonly used dementia drugs can help more patients with Alzheimer’s

Public release date: 7-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Katherine Barnes katherine.barnes@kcl.ac.uk 44-207-848-3076 King's College London

The dementia drug donepezil (Aricept), already widely used to treat mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, can also help in moderate to severe patients, according to a report funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) and the Alzheimer's Society. The study suggests that extending treatment to this group could help treat twice as many sufferers worldwide. Encouragingly, the drug has greater positive benefits for patients more severely affected than for those in the earlier stages of dementia.

It is estimated that 18 million people worldwide suffer from Alzheimer's disease, which is the most common cause of dementia. According to the World Health Organization, of the 35 million people currently living with dementia globally, 58% live in low- and middle-income countries and by 2050 this figure is projected to reach 71% of the total.

The multi-centre UK study, led by Professor Robert Howard at King's College London, is the first trial to demonstrate the value of continued drug intervention for those patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer's disease who have deteriorated beyond the point where donepezil is currently recommended.

The study, to be published in the New England Journal of Medicine, looked at two drugs: donepezil and memantine. Donepezil is the most commonly prescribed of the dementia drugs and is recommended for patients at the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease. Doctors are currently advised to stop prescribing donepezil when the disease progresses to become moderate to severe and until now there has been no clear evidence that continuing treatment is of benefit to patients.

Over the course of the trial, patients who continued to take donepezil showed considerably less decline in cognition memory, orientation, language function and function (retained ability to carry out simple daily tasks and self-care) than those taking a placebo drug. The benefits seen with continued treatment were clinically important and were greater than those previously seen in patients with less severe Alzheimer's disease. Whilst the effect was slightly smaller, starting memantine treatment also resulted in significantly better cognitive and functional abilities compared with those taking a placebo.

Professor Robert Howard, lead author from the Institute of Psychiatry at King's says: "As patients progress to more severe forms of Alzheimer's disease, clinicians are faced with a difficult decision as to whether to continue or not with dementia drugs and, until now, there has been little evidence to guide that decision. For the first time, we have robust and compelling evidence that treatment with these drugs can continue to help patients at the later, more severe stages of the disease. We observed that patients who continued taking donepezil were better able to remember, understand, communicate and perform daily tasks for at least a year longer than those who stopped taking the drugs. These improvements were noticeable to patients, their caregivers and doctors. Both donepezil and memantine will soon be off patent and available in very cheap generic preparations. These findings will greatly increase the numbers of patients in the developed and developing world that we are able to treat."

Professor Nick Fox, MRC Senior Clinical Fellow at the Institute of Neurology, University College London, says: "The number of people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia is reaching critical levels. It has never been more important to invest in research which will enable doctors to make informed decisions based on the best evidence possible when deciding what treatments to give patients. The MRC has an ongoing commitment to the development of effective, safe treatments that will improve the quality of life for people with Alzheimer's disease and their care givers."

Professor Clive Ballard, Director of Research at Alzheimer's Society, says: "Thanks to the Alzheimer's drug donepezil, tens of thousands of people in the early to moderate stages of the condition are able to recognise their family for longer, play with their grandchildren and make vital plans for the future. This major new trial now shows that there could also be significant benefits on continuing the treatment into the later stages too. There are 750,000 people with dementia in the UK yet currently prescription levels of Alzheimer's drugs are still low. If this is to change we have to improve the shocking diagnosis rates and ensure everyone is given the opportunity to try treatments."

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Commonly used dementia drugs can help more patients with Alzheimer's

Doctors ‘acting like vets with dementia patients’: Damning report reveals communication failure of medical staff

Some doctors believe sufferers 'don't suffer pain in the same way' Nurse found by researchers reprimanding elderly dementia sufferer for losing more weight

By Sophie Borland

Last updated at 11:29 PM on 27th February 2012

Doctors and nurses caring for dementia patients often ‘make it up as they go along’ because they have no idea how to treat them, a study has revealed.

The shaming research lifts the lid on attitudes to dealing with vulnerable patients and reports a series of disturbing admissions about how little regard some health professionals have for those suffering in later life.

One consultant admitted to using a ‘veterinary approach’ towards the sick.

Shaming: The report on dementia care exposes doctors' attitudes to the elderly and is based on lengthy interviews with medics in Nottingham (picture posed by models)

Another said dementia patients are ‘hugely sapping of our scarce resources’ as ‘they can’t do anything for themselves’.

Others have disclosed that, although many of their patients have dementia, they have not ‘ever, ever had any teaching’ in how to properly look after them.

 

Some even believed that people with dementia do not suffer pain in the same way as those without the condition.

The candid admissions have been made to academics undertaking an extensive study on attitudes of hospital staff towards the elderly with dementia.

On one occasion, researchers watched in horror as an old man was reduced to tears by a nurse who reprimanded him for losing too much weight.

Over the past three years, Professor John Gladman and his colleagues at Nottingham University have carried out lengthy interviews with 60 doctors, nurses and other staff at the Queen’s Medical Centre and Nottingham City Hospital.

Their findings have been presented to the authors of a major joint report to be published tomorrow by the NHS Confederation, Age UK and the Local Government Association.

It will demand that patients are treated with respect, in line with the Mail’s Dignity for the Elderly campaign.

One consultant admitted during an interview: ‘Sometimes you’re more veterinary in your approach.

‘And then you perhaps may not be treating them in the same way as someone else that you can talk to.’

In another of the interviews – which each lasted 40 minutes – a consultant said that dementia patients ‘can’t do anything for themselves. They won’t feed themselves, they can’t get out of bed themselves, you can’t be sure they’re drinking, they’re often incontinent.

‘The more of that patient group you have, the less care the others are going to get. They are hugely sapping of our scarce resources.’

The researchers, who began their study in 2008 and will publish it in full later this year, also made detailed notes on how patients were being looked after on wards.

On one occasion, they saw an elderly man with dementia in tears being ‘reprimanded’ by a nurse for losing more weight.

The researchers wrote: ‘He is agitated and frightened, crying with tears down his face.

‘Not one member of staff offers any comfort or reassurance. The staff nurse tuts and reprimands him for losing more weight.’

They also interviewed a young woman whose grandmother was in hospital, who said: ‘We were told by the doctor that people with dementia don’t feel pain as much as somebody who hasn’t got dementia.’

Professor Gladman, who specialises in care of the elderly, said most of the staff had not been trained to look after dementia sufferers and often ‘make it up as they go along’.

But he added that figures show half of patients in hospital over the age of 70 have dementia and half of those who fracture their hip have the illness.

Care: Doctors often simply 'make it up as they go along' - and one doctor admitted taking a 'veterinary approach' towards the sick (picture posed by model)

‘Some people said they had never had any training at all,’ said Professor Gladman. ‘People said they knew the causes of dementia – they could tell you microscopic changes that happen to patients – but they didn’t know what to do. They sort of make it up as they go along.’

He added: ‘The only people who said they were confident had not had training but had experience elsewhere – [they had] worked in a care home or looked after their own parents or grandparents.’

Although the study involved staff in only two hospitals in Nottingham, Professor Gladman said he believes the problems they identified exist across the NHS.

He said that although increasing numbers of patients going to hospital would have dementia in the future – because of the UK’s ageing population – the NHS ‘hasn’t really got to grips with the problem’. ‘The system isn’t prepared for the job it’s got to do,’ he said.

The Mail has consistently called for an improvement in the treatment of older patients as part of our Dignity for the Elderly campaign.

Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients Association, said: ‘It brings shame on the NHS that a consultant can say, in the course of this research, that he avoids talking to dementia patients.

‘Dementia patients need to be treated with dignity and respect.

‘But people contacting us tell us about dementia patients that are being ignored by clinicians, and who they feel are being treated as second-class citizens.

‘It brings shame on our society that so many elderly people, with and without dementia, are treated so poorly in our hospitals.’

 

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Doctors 'acting like vets with dementia patients': Damning report reveals communication failure of medical staff

Alzheimer’s, Dementia Care to Cost U.S. $200 Billion This Year

THURSDAY, March 8 (HealthDay News) -- Caring for people with Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia will cost the United States about $200 billion this year, a total that includes $140 billion paid by Medicare and Medicaid, new statistics released Thursday show.

Medicaid payments are 19 times higher for seniors with Alzheimer's and other dementias and Medicare payments for the conditions are nearly three times higher, compared to payments for other patients, according to the "2012 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures" report from the Alzheimer's Association.

Nearly 30 percent of people with Alzheimer's and other dementias are covered by both Medicare and Medicaid, compared to 11 percent of people without the conditions. This means that Medicare and Medicaid costs associated with Alzheimer's and other dementias will continue to rise as baby boomers age, the report said.

"Alzheimer's is already a crisis, and it's growing worse with every year," Harry Johns, president and CEO of the Alzheimer's Association, said in an association news release.

"While lives affected and care costs soar, the cost of doing nothing is far greater than acting now. Alzheimer's is a tremendous cost-driver for families and for Medicare and Medicaid. This crisis simply cannot be allowed to reach its maximum scale because it will overwhelm an already overburdened system," Johns added.

Most people with Alzheimer's and other dementias have at least one other serious chronic health problem, and Alzheimer's acts as a "cost multiplier" on these other diseases, according to the report.

For example, the statistics showed a senior with diabetes and Alzheimer's costs Medicare 81 percent more than a senior with diabetes alone. And a senior with cancer and Alzheimer's costs Medicare 53 percent more than a senior with cancer alone.

Mental impairment in patients with Alzheimer's and other dementias complicates the management of care, resulting in more and longer hospital stays, the authors noted in the news release.

"This disease must be addressed on parallel tracks: supporting research to find treatments that cure, delay or prevent the disease, and offering assistance and support to the more than 5 million Americans now living with Alzheimer's and their more than 15 million caregivers," Johns said.

"This is what the National Alzheimer's Plan is all about. Caring for people with Alzheimer's and other dementias costs America $200 billion in just one year. By committing just 1 percent of that cost, $2 billion, to research, it could begin to put the nation on a path to effective treatments and, ultimately, a cure," he noted.

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Alzheimer's, Dementia Care to Cost U.S. $200 Billion This Year

Rarer causes of dementia – Alzheimer’s Society dementia brain video – Video

03-01-2012 11:54 http://www.alzheimers.org.uk This film looks at some of the rarer causes of dementia, including Down's syndrome and Korsakoff's syndrome. To download a transcript of the film, please click here http Please watch our other videos to see how brain cells function, hear what dementia is, and to hear more about Alzheimer's disease, Posterior Cortical Atrophy, vascular dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, fronto-temporal dementia and other rarer causes of dementia. Alzheimer's Society is dedicated to defeating dementia through research. Our unique research programme funds research into the cause, cure, care and prevention of dementia to improve treatment for people today and to search for a cure for tomorrow. We are the only organisation to work with leading scientists and people affected by dementia to ensure our research influences practice and transforms lives. With the right investment, dementia can be defeated. http://www.alzheimers.org.uk If you have found this tool useful please consider donating to our research programme by following this link http://www.alzheimers.org.ukThere are more than 750000 people in the UK affected by dementia with numbers set to rise to 1 million by 2021. More than half of these have Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's Society is the UK's leading care and research charity for people with dementia and those who care for them. Support the fight against dementia http://www.alzheimers.org.uk

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Rarer causes of dementia - Alzheimer's Society dementia brain video - Video

Dementia: Peter and Sheila’s story – diagnosis, relationships, support (subtitled) – Video

20-09-2011 05:26 http://www.alzheimers.org.uk This is a subtitled version, for non-subtitled version please see http://www.youtube.com Articulate actor Peter first noticed something was wrong when he had trouble remembering his lines. Here Peter's wife Sheila discusses her husband's dementia diagnosis, and the huge impact this had on their relationship. Their dementia support worker Karen talks about the support she was able to provide to help Peter and Sheila live better with dementia. Peter now lives comfortably in a care home.There are more than 750000 people in the UK affected by dementia with numbers set to rise to 1 million by 2021. Alzheimer's Society is the UK's leading care and research charity for people with dementia and those who care for them. Support the fight against dementia. Visit us at http://www.alzheimers.org.uk

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Dementia: Peter and Sheila's story - diagnosis, relationships, support (subtitled) - Video

Dementia ‘chemical cosh’ warnings

Experts have found more evidence that prescribing dementia patients "chemical cosh" drugs increases their risk of early death.

Antipsychotics are widely used in care homes and hospitals, but critics argue they are often given to sedate patients to make them easier to look after rather than for any medical benefit.

Guidelines say they should only be used as a last resort and over a short period of time, but in some cases patients have been prescribed them for years.

The latest research from Harvard Medical School is the biggest ever among US nursing home residents, involving 75,445 people aged 65 and over.

It examined a range of drugs and found one in particular - haloperidol -increased the risk a patient would die. Haloperidol is widely used in the UK as well as the US. Compared with the drug risperidone, users of haloperidol had double the risk of death, while those on another drug, quetiapine, had a decreased risk, the study found.

Writing online in the British Medical Journal, the experts concluded: "The data suggest that the risk of mortality with these drugs is generally increased with higher doses and seems to be highest for haloperidol and least for quetiapine." They suggest not all antipsychotic medication carries the same risk of death but that doctors may want to consider the evidence when prescribing the drugs.

Previous studies have found that antipsychotics as a class of drugs double the risk of death and treble the risk of stroke in dementia patients.

A Government-commissioned review in 2009 found 180,000 people with dementia were prescribed antipsychotics, of which 144,000 were given them inappropriately.

The drugs have been dubbed a "chemical cosh" due their effects and are thought to contribute to the premature deaths of 1,800 patients a year.

Rebecca Wood, chief executive at Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "The risks associated with antipsychotics are well-established, and these findings underline the importance of ensuring that where these drugs are prescribed, their use must be carefully monitored."

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Dementia 'chemical cosh' warnings

Slow walking ‘predicts dementia’

15 February 2012 Last updated at 21:52 ET

The speed someone walks may predict the likelihood of developing dementia later in life, according to researchers in the US.

They also told a conference that grip strength in middle-age was linked to the chance of a stroke.

The scientists said more studies were needed to understand what was happening.

Experts said the findings raised important questions, but more research was needed.

Suggestions of a link between slow walking speed and poor health have been made before.

A study, published in the British Medical Journal in 2009, said there was a "strong association" between slow walking speed and death from heart attacks and other heart problems. A Journal of the American Medical Association study suggested a link between walking faster over the age of 65 and a longer life.

Dr Erica Camargo, who conducted the latest study at the Boston Medical Centre, said: "While frailty and lower physical performance in elderly people have been associated with an increased risk of dementia, we weren't sure until now how it impacted people of middle age."

Brain scans, walking speed and grip strength were recorded for 2,410 people who were, on average, 62 years old.

Results presented at the Academy of Neurology's annual meeting said that 11 years later, 34 people had developed dementia and 79 had had a stroke.

The researchers said slower walking speeds were linked to a higher risk of dementia and stronger grip with a lower risk of stroke.

Continue reading the main story “Start Quote

"Before people take stock in the strength of a handshake or the speed you cross the road, more research is needed to understand why and what other factors are involved”

End Quote Dr Anne Corbett Alzheimer's Society

Dr Camargo said: "These are basic office tests which can provide insight into risk of dementia and stroke and can be easily performed by a neurologist or general practitioner.

"Further research is needed to understand why this is happening and whether preclinical disease could cause slow walking and decreased strength."

The findings have not yet, however, been published in a peer-reviewed academic journal.

Dr Marie Janson, director of development at Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "Although this study has yet to be published in full, it does raise some important questions about whether physical problems, such as difficulty walking, could precede other symptoms associated with dementia.

"Further study could shed new insight into how walking speed and dementia may be linked."

Dr Anne Corbett, research manager at the Alzheimer's Society, said: "Before people take stock in the strength of a handshake or the speed you cross the road, more research is needed to understand why and what other factors are involved.

"The good news is that there are many things you can do to reduce your risk of developing dementia.

"We recommend you eat a healthy balanced diet, don't smoke, maintain a healthy weight, take regular exercise; and get your blood pressure and cholesterol checked regularly."

The Stroke Association's Dr Sharlin Ahmed, said: "Around a third of those who have a stroke are left with some kind of physical disability, including hand weakness and difficulty walking. However, this is the first time we have seen research that looks at the presence of related symptoms before a stroke.

"This is an interesting study, but a lot more research is needed before we can conclude that strength of grip or walking speed can determine the risk of stroke."

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Slow walking 'predicts dementia'

Dementia/Alzheimer’s: Why Activities Matter – Video

26-09-2011 07:50 This DVD is available now at Amazon. Visit http://www.amazon.com . This video clip is an excerpt of "Filling the Day with Meaning", a 2.5 hour training DVD for Alzheimer's/Dementia Caregivers, with Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA. Use engaging activities to give back moments of joy and happiness to patients with special challenges, such as those with early onset, tendencies for elopement, falls, and more. Learn the difference between simple entertainment and engaging projects that stimulate brain activity. This workshop full of indispensable ideas and tips on how to give moments of joy. Learn - what makes an engaging activity - how to build care partner skills - how to create an inviting and safe environment - which key activities to consider at different disease stages - how to successfully handle challenging cases, such as early onset and men and much more "Filling the Day with Meaning" is presented by The Pines Education Institute of SW Florida and facilitated by Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA. The Pines Education Insitute is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to providing education, outreach programs, support, resources and counseling to family members and geriatric caregivers. For more information please visit http://www.pinesofsarasota.org.

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Dementia/Alzheimer's: Why Activities Matter - Video

Pat Summitt’s talks about her early onset dementia diagnosis – Video

23-08-2011 13:28 University of Tennessee women's basketball coach Pat Summitt talks about her diagnosis of early onset dementia in a video statement recorded on Monday, Aug. 21, 2011, at her Blount County home. Courtesy of the University of Tennessee Read the related story: http://www.govolsxtra.com

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Pat Summitt's talks about her early onset dementia diagnosis - Video

Later stage dementia: Bruce and Jan’s story – Video

20-09-2011 06:44 http://www.alzheimers.org.uk Some viewers may find this distressing. Bruce Bovill gives a brave and moving account of his experience caring for his wife, Jan, in the later stages of her dementia. For a fact sheet on the later stages of dementia please see alzheimers.org.ukThere are more than 750000 people in the UK affected by dementia with numbers set to rise to 1 million by 2021. Alzheimer's Society is the UK's leading care and research charity for people with dementia and those who care for them. Support the fight against dementia. Visit us at http://www.alzheimers.org.uk

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Dealing with dementia at Christmas – Alzheimer’s Society December 2011 podcast – Video

06-12-2011 13:53 http://www.alzheimers.org.uk In this episode we hear from National Dementia Helpline Advisor, Sandra Hillier about the concerns of families living with dementia over the festive period. Including ideas for gifts and where to go for advice and information. Also, Dame Jo Williams, chair of the Care Quality Commission, discusses their work, what excellence in care looks like and the changes she believes the government need to adopt in order to improve our social care system. Listen to our other podcasts at http://www.alzheimers.org.ukThere are more than 750000 people in the UK affected by dementia with numbers set to rise to 1 million by 2021. Alzheimer's Society is the UK's leading care and research charity for people with dementia and those who care for them. Support the fight against dementia. Visit us at http://www.alzheimers.org.uk

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Dealing with dementia at Christmas - Alzheimer's Society December 2011 podcast - Video

What is the Difference between Dementia and Alzheimer’s? – Video

14-11-2011 21:05 This video answers the frequently asked question-what is the difference between dementia and Alzheimer's--by using sketches that bring out the relationship, telling us how dementia is a general group of symptoms related to cognition, and Alzheimers' is a disease that causes it (the most common one). (Video transcript at dementia-care-notes.in English-alz-dem-transcript.pdf ) A Hindi version of this video is available at: http://www.youtube.com Visit us at dementia-care-notes.in

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What is the Difference between Dementia and Alzheimer's? - Video

What is dementia? – Alzheimer’s Society dementia brain video – Video

03-01-2012 11:01 http://www.alzheimers.org.uk This film explains and defines what dementia is, and how it affects the brain. To download a transcript of the film, please click here http Please watch our other videos to see how brain cells function, hear what dementia is, and to hear more about Alzheimer's disease, Posterior Cortical Atrophy, vascular dementia, dementia with Lewy bodies, fronto-temporal dementia and other rarer causes of dementia. Alzheimer's Society is dedicated to defeating dementia through research. Our unique research programme funds research into the cause, cure, care and prevention of dementia to improve treatment for people today and to search for a cure for tomorrow. We are the only organisation to work with leading scientists and people affected by dementia to ensure our research influences practice and transforms lives. With the right investment, dementia can be defeated. http://www.alzheimers.org.uk If you have found this tool useful please consider donating to our research programme by following this link http://www.alzheimers.org.ukThere are more than 750000 people in the UK affected by dementia with numbers set to rise to 1 million by 2021. More than half of these have Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's Society is the UK's leading care and research charity for people with dementia and those who care for them. Support the fight against dementia http://www.alzheimers.org.uk

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What is dementia? - Alzheimer's Society dementia brain video - Video