Chichester Observer

Dementia support centre staff owed ‘debt of thanks’

- Karen Dunn Local democracy reporter

Staff at a dementia support centre are owed‘ an enormous debt of thanks and gratitude’ for stepping up after NHS assessment services were suspended, councillor­s were told.

James Vivian (Lib Dem, Chichester Central) heaped praise on the team from Sage House during a meeting of the district council.

Mr Vivian tabled a notice of motion following the decision by the Sussex Partnershi­p NHS Foundation Trust to close its assessment service to new patients between January and April. The motion, roundly approved, described the closure, however temporary, as ‘unacceptab­le’ and said the council would be opposed to any future ‘suspension or closure of the service’.

Leader Adrian Moss agreed to write to Gillian Keegan and Andrew gr if fith, mps for chi chester and Arundel & South Downs respective­ly, as well as the Department of Health, urging them to ensure funding for the Sussex Dementia remained in place and the future of the service be guaranteed.

A number of councillor­s described their own experience­s caring for parents with dementia. Mr Vivian said: “Instead of a rapid decline in someone’s mental state, dementia can be a gentle drip-drip-drip of decline over several years. And it is a long road to diagnosis. Data shows that it can take four months from referral to diagnosis, with some waiting nearly two years to see a specialist.

“Long wait times work for a struggling healthcare system, but leave families and patients in the middle of a very long tightrope. And that is why early assessment is such a godsend for families. Having a fixed, firm diagnosis can be a relief, even if the condition being diagnosed can mean years of ongoing care.”

The motion also thanked the team at sage house, tang mere, for their work in plugging the service gap.

Tracie Bangert, cabinet member for communitie­s & well-being, was asked to lobby the West Sussex Health and Adult Social Care Scrutiny Committee on the issue. She said: “As a district with an ageing population, it is imperative these services are available for our residents who require assessment around dementia. It is also essential their families have the reassuranc­e they will have access to the right support should they need it. We cannot under-estimate the impact the closure of the NHS dementia assessment service will have on residents in our district and beyond.

"As cabinet member for communitie­s, I urge all councillor­s to encourage the promotion of incentives to create dementia-friendly communitie­s as have been successful­ly implemente­d in Selsey and parts of Hampshire.”

Roy Briscoe (Con, Westbourne) added: “Any of us that have experience­d a family member that’ s got dementia will know how it can destroy families. We only have a limited influence. We will do everything we can to try to keep those services that we desperatel­y need. We can lobby and I hope that’s listened to.”

Thanking his colleagues for their support, Mr Vivian said: “This is not a proud moment for our local services. Our residents are rightly asking where government is and what is it doing in Chichester. We are told this closure is temporary. But, when asked, the Trust could not give assurances about the future of the service. I, for one, am tired of the cut-cut-cutting of services locally and nationally. Previously it was railway ticket offices. Now it is dementia assessment services. It is time for us to ask, what is next on the chopping block?”

When asked about the futureof the service, a spokesman for the Trust said: “From April 1 we are resuming our memory assessment services fully. The service was temporaril­y reduced in January. While we continued to see patients who had started their treatment programme,from april 1, we will resume seeing people who have been referred for a new memory assessment.”

 ?? ?? Technologi­cal devices can help or monitor to maintain independen­ce
Technologi­cal devices can help or monitor to maintain independen­ce

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