Scottish Daily Mail

Boris pledges £250m to fight dementia

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor Petition at change.org/dementiaca­re

A NEW £250million artificial intelligen­ce laboratory will boost dementia research, Boris Johnson announced last night.

The Prime Minister pledged the lab will also improve the lives of cancer and heart disease patients.

The money will fund ground-breaking research to spot the signs of dementia, enabling patients to receive treatment far earlier – and perhaps even help prevent the onset of the disease.

Mr Johnson said the funding would enable up to five million people to be given a free personalis­ed health report based on their DNA. He added: ‘The NHS is revered for the world-class care it provides. But it is also leading the way in harnessing new technology to treat and prevent, from earlier cancer detection to spotting the deadly signs of dementia.

‘Today’s funding is not just about the future of care, though. It will also boost the front line by automating admin tasks and freeing up staff to care for patients.

‘My task is to ensure the NHS has the funding it needs to make a real difference to the lives of staff and patients. Transformi­ng care through artificial intelligen­ce is a perfect illustrati­on of that.’

The funding boost is a victory for the Daily Mail, which has called for improved care for dementia sufferers. We launched a campaign last month calling for a crossparty solution to the crisis of sufferers selling homes to pay for care.

No10 said AI is already being developed in some hospitals, successful­ly predicting cancer survival rates and cutting the number of missed appointmen­ts. The £250million will be spent on a National Artificial Intelligen­ce Lab to make the UK a world leader in research.

UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: ‘We are on the cusp of a huge health tech revolution that could transform patient experience by making the NHS a truly predictive, preventive and personalis­ed health and care service.

‘I’m determined to give the NHS the chance to be the world leader in saving lives through artificial intelligen­ce and genomics.’

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