Julie Hayden
Julie discusses her involvement in the creation of a module for the University of Bradford’s MSc in Advanced Dementia Studies programme and why co-production is so important.
Care and support is usually geared towards the elderly and this has got to change. We also need to better support the children of people living with young onset dementia.
Tony HallMy name is Tony Hall and I live in Bristol. I was a carer for my wife Barbara for over 20 years. She first showed symptoms of young onset frontotemporal dementia in 1999 when she was 53 years old; sadly, she passed away in April 2022.
It took us several years to get a formal diagnosis and we realised during that time how much ignorance there is about dementia, the signs and symptoms and, more importantly, how to support someone once diagnosed.
So in July 2013, we decided to launch a local charity called Bristol Dementia Action Alliance (BDAA) with the aim of making Bristol the most dementia-friendly city in the UK.
The BDAA run or support:
We also provide free MP3 players with a playlist of 15 favourite songs to people living with dementia. Music is really powerful and stimulates the brain which is brilliant for someone living with dementia. And we campaign on behalf of people with a dementia diagnosis on topics such as the closure of public toilets and libraries and on accessibility issues. We work in partnership with around 30 other local agencies and have a very close partnership with Alive, a charity dedicated to improving the quality of life of older people and their carers, and BRACE, a Bristol-based dementia research charity.
We are fully aware that the needs and issues around young onset dementia are totally different to older people. Care and support is usually geared towards the elderly and this has got to change. We also need to better support the children of people living with young onset dementia.
A few years ago, my eldest daughter asked me what I wanted for Christmas. After thinking for a moment, I replied, “A bucketful of patience, my love”. She smiled knowing full well that family members looking after someone with young onset dementia need spade loads of patience.
Over the years, I’ve been asked many times to write a book about our experiences and eventually I did. My book ‘A bucketful of patience’ covers our journey with dementia over twenty-two years. It was published in September 2023 by Bristol Books.
You can order a copy of Tony’s book here.
Julie discusses her involvement in the creation of a module for the University of Bradford’s MSc in Advanced Dementia Studies programme and why co-production is so important.
Phil shares how a diagnosis of Lewy body dementia in his 50s ended his 40+ year career as a nurse and senior university lecturer and offers advice to people affected and employers.
Emily was diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia aged 51. She found little peer support available in her home country of Singapore so set up an online group of her own which caters to English, Chinese and Malay-speaking individuals.