South Wales Echo

What it means to live well with dementia

While there is no cure for dementia, finding ways to live well with the condition are improving, as research associate at Cardiff University’s School of Social Sciences, explains

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DEMENTIA is a term that covers a wide range of different conditions and every person with dementia experience­s illness and the challenges it brings in different ways.

While prevention and successful treatment of dementia remain elusive, finding ways to live well with dementia are important goals for patients and their families and this is increasing­ly a focus of Welsh and UK government policy.

But we know relatively little about what living well with dementia means to the people and families affected by it or what factors support or hinder people’s ability to live well.

There is also a lack of knowledge about the ways in which people with dementia and their families make sense of and adapt to the condition and to the changes they experience over time.

Researcher­s at WISERD (Wales Institute of Social & Economic Research, Data & Methods) at Cardiff University, are working in partnershi­p with the Research in Aging and Cognitive Health Group (REACH) at the University of Exeter on a study that specifical­ly addresses the question of what it means to live well with dementia and how this can best be supported.

The ESRC and NIHR-funded study is called IDEAL, short for Improving the experience of Dementia and Enhancing Active Life and it is the largest UK study of its kind.

The researcher­s have recruited more than 1,200 people with dementia and their carers living in England, Wales and Scotland into a longitudin­al study.

Each person and their carer will be interviewe­d and surveyed at three separate times over three years, allowing changes in their illness, their quality of life and their social circumstan­ces to be carefully measured. In this way the study aims to identify the social and psychologi­cal factors that influence people with dementia and their families’ ability to live well with any type of dementia.

The researcher­s based in WISERD are carrying out some additional indepth interviews with a smaller number of IDEAL participan­ts to understand the reasons why some social and psychologi­cal factors shape people’s experience of living with dementia, for better or worse.

This aspect of the study will enable those with dementia, and their families, to describe what is important to them in relation to living well with dementia, in their own words.

This informatio­n will provide the research team with more detail about how and why certain factors impact on living well.

The research has been planned and developed in partnershi­p with people with dementia and their carers, and will provide a much-needed evidence base from which to identify what changes could be made at individual and community levels to actually make living well with dementia more achievable.

Ultimately, the research team are confident that the study will result in more informed recommenda­tions for social and healthcare purchasers, providers and planners as well as better-informed advice and guidance for people living with dementia and those who support them.

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