The Hamilton Spectator

Positive change for people living with dementia

It’s estimated Hamilton, Haldimand home to 12,000 people with this mental disorder

- TRACY GIBBS AND SHELAGH KIELY Tracy Gibbs and Shelagh Kiely are project co-ordinators on the Empowering Dementia Friendly Project. For more informatio­n about the Hamilton Council on Aging or to make a donation, please visit coahamilto­n.ca.

Ontario’s Seniors Month recognizes, celebrates and raises awareness about challenges faced by older adults in our communitie­s. One real challenge affecting many older adults is a growing number of individual­s living with dementia.

The Alzheimer Society of Canada indicates there are more than 500,000 Canadians living with dementia today and this number will almost double by 2030. It has been estimated 255,000 people are currently living with dementia in Ontario and approximat­ely 12,000 people are living with dementia in Hamilton and Haldimand.

Last year, the Hamilton Council on Aging in partnershi­p with a team of community partners were granted funding to pursue an innovative project to engage and empower people living with dementia to create positive change in our communitie­s. The Empowering Dementia Friendly Communitie­s project (EDFC) is a four-year investment (2020-23) from the Public Health Agency of Canada’s Dementia Community Investment Fund. It is providing an opportunit­y to engage people living with dementia, their care partners, families and other stakeholde­rs to create dementia-friendly communitie­s in Hamilton and Haldimand county.

The goal of EDFC is to advance the rights and interests of people living with dementia and be a catalyst for local change toward inclusive, dementia-friendly communitie­s — where people living with dementia are understood, respected and supported.

To begin this work, it was vital we consider and hear from people affected by dementia. In 2020, we engaged over 300 people living with dementia and their care partners in Hamilton and Haldimand. We learned about the challenges and barriers experience­d by people living with dementia to participat­ing in community life. We also heard their ideas for solutions in how we might make our communitie­s more dementia friendly. A summary of our consultati­on is now available in a report on our website (EDFC What We Heard, June 2021). This report recognizes the following five themes identified by persons affected by dementia in how we can make our communitie­s more dementia-friendly:

1. Empowering people living with dementia

2. Challengin­g stigma and building understand­ing

3. Fostering social inclusion and participat­ion

4. Creating dementia-inclusive-built environmen­ts and transporta­tion

5. Improving community responsive­ness to crisis/COVID 19 Notable points:

97 per cent of participan­ts we followed up with felt this project is very important or extremely important and over 55 per cent requested to stay informed of future opportunit­ies to be involved. This suggests there is a need for this project and for change. It also suggests people with lived experience care about this work and want to be involved.

As part of this work, in partnershi­p with the Age-Friendly Hamilton initiative, dementia-specific recommenda­tions have been incorporat­ed into Hamilton’s Age-Friendly Plan, resulting in one of the first Age-friendly — dementiafr­iendly integrated community plans in Canada.

Over the next year, the Empowering Dementia-Friendly Communitie­s project, in partnershi­p with people living with dementia, will be creating an anti-stigma campaign and engaging the leadership of people living with dementia to inform and implement local change initiative­s.

You can find out more about the consultati­on, what we heard from people affected by dementia and recommenda­tions in the What We Heard Report on the Hamilton Council on Aging website at coahamilto­n.ca. It is essential the unique and shared experience­s of living with dementia are amplified. We hope this project becomes a catalyst to learn more about and be actively involved in making our communitie­s dementia friendly.

 ?? TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? The Hamilton Council on Aging and its partners are working on a report to empower people living with dementia.
TORSTAR FILE PHOTO The Hamilton Council on Aging and its partners are working on a report to empower people living with dementia.

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