The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

£600,000 lottery windfall will benefit people living with dementia.

WELLBEING: Kirrie Connection­s boost after Worcester University gets funding to support dementia centres

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

“Kirrie Connection­s is delighted to be developing the first Scottish meeting centre... GRAHAM GALLOWAY

Angus is to enjoy the spin-off benefit of a near £600,000 National Lottery windfall for Worcester University to support people and families living with dementia across the UK.

The £587,000 of vital funding will lead to the creation of a network of meeting centres throughout the country, with Kirriemuir the first north of the border.

The Kirrie Connection­s dementia friendly hub recently welcomed leading figures from the project to get the ball rolling on the Angus part of the project, and say they are delighted the initiative has secured such significan­t funding.

Kirrie Connection­s project manager Graham Galloway welcomed Professor Dawn Brooker and Dr Shirley Evans from the university to the first initiative group meeting in the Bank Street hub to see the assist with the local start of the scheme – which originated in the Netherland­s – and show them the wider work around dementia being carried out locally.

Mr Galloway said: “Kirrie Connection­s is delighted to be developing the first Scottish meeting centre and to be working with the University of Worcester in their national reference group as part of the Uk-wide project.”

The Dementia Friendly Kirriemuir Project was establishe­d in 2015 with funding from the Life Changes Trust.

It has gone on to develop a number of strands to help people in the area who are living with dementia, as well as their families and carers.

These have included developmen­t of a dementia-friendly garden, the recent creation of a memories mosaic as part of the seven-figure town centre CARS scheme and a sporting memories group.

Professor Dawn Brooker, director of the associatio­n for dementia studies at Worcester University, who is leading the project, said: “This National Lottery funding will have a significan­t impact on many people’s lives.

“The number of people affected by dementia continues to rise with little hope of an early cure.

“The aim is to help communitie­s across the UK to establish meeting centres by providing people with a ready means of learning about the model, getting practical advice on how to establish a centre, training staff and supporters, finding funding and sustaining help and support for the longer term.”

Meeting centres originated in the Netherland­s and are a local resource, operating out of ordinary community buildings, offering friendly expert support to people living at home with dementia.

“At the heart of each meeting centre is a social club where people can meet to have fun, talk to others, and get great help that focuses on what they need,” said Professor Brooker.

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? Project manager Graham Galloway at the dementia garden in Kirriemuir.
Picture: Kim Cessford. Project manager Graham Galloway at the dementia garden in Kirriemuir.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom