Urgent support needed for people living with dementia
Urgent support needed for people living with dementia
Government must implement the New Zealand Framework for Dementia Care urgently and in full, says the organisation that supports people living with dementia.
Releasing the organisation’s official briefing to the incoming minister, Alzheimers NZ chief executive, Catherine Hall, says dementia is one of New Zealand’s biggest healthcare issues and affects four out of five Kiwis.
She says government must act now to implement the Framework in full because it outlines sensible and urgently-needed steps that will mitigate some of the long-term impacts dementia will have on New Zealand society. The Framework was prepared by the National government in 2013.
She says the number of people directly impacted by dementia is expected to triple to nearly 170,000 by 2050 and annual costs will reach nearly $5 billion unless something is done now.
“Research indicates that for every dollar invested now in supporting people affected by dementia, government will reap a nearly $7 return.
“As a country we can’t afford to do nothing about the dementia challenge, and we need to take steps urgently.”
Alzheimers NZ’s recommendations about
enhanced support for people living with dementia involve
four key initiatives that are outlined in the Framework and
which Ms Hall wants to see funded in Budget 2018. These
are:
• Extend existing preventative approaches
to obesity, diabetes, and cardio-vascular disease to include
middle aged and older adults by including information that
will reduce the risk or delay the onset of dementia.
•
Create the ‘navigator services’ outlined in the
Framework.
• Provide 12 months of
post-diagnostic support for people diagnosed with dementia,
and their family / whānau and care partners.
•
Produce high quality hard copy information to support people
diagnosed with dementia, and their family / whānau.
Other measures Alzheimers NZ wants in place
include:
• Promoting and creating a
dementia-friendly New Zealand, including through a national
public awareness programme.
• Ensuring care
partners can take planned breaks and support their own
health by having access to a range of respite care
options.
• Following the WHO recommendation to
“collect and use the necessary data on epidemiology, care
and resources relating to dementia [in New Zealand] in order
to implement relevant policies and plans”.
Ms Hall wants government to work alongside non-government organisations to fully implement the Dementia Framework.
She says government funding is needed, but the NGO sector will bring additional funds, volunteers, solutions, and community knowledge and contacts that will be vital to provide services ‘on the ground’.
“This is an international problem, and other countries are actively focussed on tackling the issue with a range of initiatives.
“New Zealand, however, is lagging well behind and we need to act now or, as a country, we will face major personal, societal and fiscal impacts.”
For a copy of the Alzheimers NZ BIM please click here or visit www.alzheimers.org.nz