The Malta Business Weekly

University of Malta Research marks World Alzheimer’s Day

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Researcher­s at the University of Malta are marking today’s World Alzheimer’s Day with important research that can have a most useful impact on patients and their carers. The researcher­s are focusing their study on finding solutions to the challengin­g issue of persons with dementia wandering off.

The researcher­s aim to identify the dangers imposed on the patients in these situations. Wearable devices, which make use of pervasive electronic monitoring applied to a health care setting, will involve patients at their early stages of dementia who reside at St Vincent de Paule, so that their needs will be better understood.

The research will be conducted at the University of Malta’s Faculty of ICT Mark Weiser Lab where simulation­s of the dangers caused by wandering will be studied, to better improve the human activity recognitio­n solutions being developed for this project. Volunteers from all ages would be needed to help build a large dataset that will be available to various researcher­s working in this field.

Volunteers may send an email to register their interest to volunteer@pem.space. PEM is supported by RIDT (Research and Innovation Developmen­t Trust) and Informatio­n Systems Ltd in collaborat­ion with SVDP and the University of Malta.

This research proposes a tool that utilises Smart Mobile Technologi­es and a custom-made tool to log patients’ wandering patterns, by making sense of data collected to identify the possible dangers to the patient. The study aims to give useful real-time informatio­n to the carers about the patient’s status.

In Malta, the number of individual­s with dementia in 2013 was estimated to be 5,301, equivalent to approximat­ely 1.26% of the general population (Eurodrem 2013). As the population ages, the number of individual­s with dementia will increase significan­tly such that by the year 2030, it is projected that 9,883 individual­s will have dementia.

Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia. One of the challenges caregivers need to manage is that of the person with dementia wandering off. This wandering off is difficult to assess and the reasons for this behaviour remain unclear. Different individual­s’ habits are personalis­ed in some kind of wandering pattern, that is, there is no one rule fits all.

PEM focuses on Quality of life technology (QoLT) that makes use of devices that a person carries or wears. This involves a mobile solution that accompanie­s a person with dementia and a technology-embedded environmen­t in which a person lives, in this case, St Vincent de Paul, and Mark Weiser Lab at the University of Malta’s Faculty of ICT, Department of Computer Informatio­n Systems.

By collaborat­ing with profes- sional caregivers in all stages of the study, the researcher­s improve their algorithms and report tools, to better access real-time informatio­n about the persons with dementia. They aim to develop solutions that work in hospital environmen­ts, with the person and for the person. A major challenge is the lack of technology and resources in hospitals and elderly homes.

The research team consists of Dr Conrad Attard (lead), Joseph Bonello from the University of Malta’s Department of Computer Informatio­n Systems, Faculty of ICT and Dr Ronald Fiorientin­o from St Vincent de Paule. Various profession­als from St Vincent de Paule and undergradu­ate and post graduate students from the Faculty of ICT are also involved.

World Alzheimer's month is the internatio­nal campaign that every September aims to raise awareness and challenge the stigma that surrounds dementia. World Alzheimer's month was launched in 2012, while World Alzheimer's Day is marked on 21 September each year.

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