Thursday 28th June 2012

(11 years, 10 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Baroness Barker Portrait Baroness Barker
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My Lords, I thank the noble Lord, Lord Touhig, for enabling us to hold this debate and for his eloquent and moving introduction. I confess that I am a veteran of pretty much every one of our debates in this House over the past 10 years. We have had dementia strategies and dementia plans, and I congratulate the previous Government on their work on those important documents, which have moved us forward. Dementia is something that affected my family until last December, when my mum died having, in her words, “kind of lost the place a little bit”. That was her euphemistic way of talking about dementia. It is a subject that for the past 20 years I have followed with a great deal of interest because, as noble Lords know, I work with older people.

I want to sound a somewhat more hopeful note than did the noble Lord, Lord Touhig, and I do so because two or three things have happened that give cause for optimism. Building on the work of people like the noble Baroness, Lady Greengross, and the all-party parliamentary group, as well as on important reports from Alzheimer’s bodies, the Prime Minister’s Challenge on Dementia and the updated dementia strategy are extremely good documents because they move us forward. Not only are they forward-looking, they are quite detailed. The strategy talks not just in broad terms about the need for more research and support, but it begins to draw down different areas in order to achieve a series of things which, over the next five years, will bring about real and actual change in both communities and the health service. They will be of benefit to people who have dementia and their carers.

The Prime Minister’s Challenge on Dementia is based on three things: raising awareness and understanding, early diagnosis and support, and enabling people to live well. There is a commitment to increase research funding to the unprecedented level of £66 million, some of which is to be spent in social care, which is extremely helpful. Some of the money will be spent on redesigning services in the health service, but some will also go to the Medical Research Council for further research into brain scanning. We are beginning to move away from broad strategies into more targeted and focused areas. I was pleased to see that resources are to be devoted to developing dementia-friendly communities. That is not jargon. People are starting to work towards a definition of what that is all about.

For more than 20 years I have followed the work of the Dementia Services Development Centre at Stirling University, both under its previous director and now under Professor June Andrews. It has contributed more than any other organisation to the understanding of dementia as an illness, to understanding the needs of carers, and to enabling academics and healthcare professionals to move forward. Recently, Professor Andrews gave a talk about design. She and her colleagues had been involved in a community pilot study in the Forth Valley. People from various disciplines worked for a year to see how, within their existing resources, they could manage things differently. I was pleased to see that not just the health service but organisations like the police, libraries, churches and the general public felt more confident in their ability to deal and interact with people who have dementia. We are getting close to the point where a diagnosis of dementia is not going to lead to older people and their carers automatically being cut off from the life they enjoyed previously and which, for many years to come, may still have some meaning for them.

Professor Andrews talked about the issue of design, and particularly design in people’s homes. I am very pleased that some of the people involved in the Prime Minister’s challenge are designers and private companies, looking at how they can respond in practical ways to the challenge of dementia. Professor Andrews also talked about the need to develop things like glass-fronted fridges so that people know that they have food. I look forward to the time when homes have glass-fronted freezers because I stopped counting the times that I had to throw away a freezer’s worth of food because my mum forgot about it and it went bad. Design, lighting and so on in people’s homes can make a tremendous difference to their ability to remember.

I want to focus on one particular area that has not been mentioned so far. Many older people with dementia also have other disabilities. If you are a carer supporting somebody and you try to find out about adaptations, they will be designed for a particular physical disability and not for someone who has a physical disability and also dementia. In this hopeful time, designers could look at the potential to design appliances for the home for people who have the multiple disabilities that most older people will develop.

One particular area we should focus on is telecommunications. It is great that there is enormous change going on in the world of telecommunications and that, for example, phones can now be used by people with hearing disabilities who could not use one before. Yet there is absolutely no point in having a phone that has wonderful functionality if you cannot learn to use it. Professor Andrews made an important point about the ability of people to design things in future that will have new functionality but will look like the objects that people with dementia remember—retro-designing things so that people can continue to use them.

I am also pleased that in the dementia challenge we are finally recognising that in future all health and social care professionals, whatever their discipline, will deal with people who have dementia. That will include dentists, pharmacists and others. We are now moving to a point where basic pre-qualification training for all health and social care professionals has to include dementia, whatever the area of specialism.

In the short time available, I will raise one more point. Last December, the Alzheimer’s Society produced a report, Short Changed, about the experiences of older people with dementia, and their carers, with banking and financial services. Older people with dementia are particularly vulnerable to financial abuse. We have known that for years. We knew it 15 years ago when the noble Baroness, Lady Greengross, set up Action on Elder Abuse. It is now more than five years since the passage of the Mental Capacity Act. At that time, the Office of Fair Trading and the British Bankers’ Association produced guidelines about tightening up procedures in relation to people who lack mental capacity, but we still have problems. Anybody who listens to “Money Box” will regularly hear reports of irresponsible lending to people with dementia.

I make one particular suggestion: will the Government, with the Office of Fair Trading and the British Bankers’ Association, now do some further work on banking services for people who lack capacity? Will that work draw a difference between people who have learning disabilities, people who have mental health problems which may be episodic and people who have dementia? All three have different issues but at the moment the banks treat them all the same. That is causing a problem, not least for carers of people who have dementia, who are worried and trying desperately to enable their relatives to keep control of their finances for as long as they can. They want a backstop for when the time comes when their loved ones can no longer manage.

Dementia is a terrible thing, and it is going to happen to more and more people as we live longer. It is going to become a part of life for more of us. I am not a Pollyanna, but having read the dementia strategy and the Prime Minister’s Challenge on Dementia, I think we now have reason to be much more hopeful than we have ever been that we will be able to see people living well with this terrible disease.