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Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025 Care panel Moderator: Vivienne Parry Science Journalist & Broadcaster #DefeatingDementia

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

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Page 1: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Care panel

Moderator: Vivienne ParryScience Journalist & Broadcaster

#DefeatingDementia

Page 2: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Paul HoganFounder, Home Instead

#DefeatingDementia

Page 3: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Each Home Instead Senior Care® franchise office is independently owned and operated.

The Impact of Innovation Across Technology, Health, Care and Urban Design for Super Ageing Societies

5 DECEMBER 2018

Relationship-Based Home Care

for People with Dementia

PRESENTED BY

Paul Hogan, Founder and Chairman of Home Instead Senior Care

Page 4: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

RBHC Benefits Individuals,

Families, and Society

Enhanced Emotional

Well-Being

Better Care for People

Living with Dementia

Greater Flexibility and

Peace of Mind for Families

Better Care

Coordination

Improved Care

Safety and Quality

Lower Healthcare

Costs

Page 5: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Relationship-based home care (RHBC) is an innovative type of

care organized around the needs of the care recipient, rather than

the completion of a predefined set of tasks. Home Instead is

delivering this innovative type of care in more than 75,000 homes

around the globe.

Relationship-based home care:

• Is person-centered

• Is outcomes-base

• Keeps care recipients healthy and independent

• Embraces the philosophy “relationship first—task second”

• Engages care recipients collaboratively and purposefully, while

also connecting emotionally

Relationship-Based Home Care

Delivers on Our Promise of

High-Quality Care

Page 6: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

How we provide care

Person-Centered and

Relationship-Based

Specific Focus on Alzheimer’s

and Other Dementias

Care for the

Family Caregiver

• 90% of seniors prefer to live at

home as they age

• Focus on relationships, not tasks

• Personalized care solutions,

including care coordination

• Alzheimer’s training for our

professional CAREGivers

• Free Alzheimer’s training for the public

• 10,000+ in-person trainings completed

and 50,000+ by e-learning course

• Free training and resources for

family caregivers and care partners

• Focus on family caregiver wellness

• Alleviates physical and emotional

burdens, provides peace of mind

Active &

Healthy Living

Extended Life

With Quality

OUR CARE OBJECTIVES

Page 7: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Home Instead Is Improving Quality

of Life for Seniors with Alzheimer’s

Overall Better

Quality of Care73% of caregivers using professional home care rated the

overall quality of care for their family members with AOD as

“very good” or “excellent,” compared with 62% of non-users.

Double the

Care TimeAOD patients with paid home care received 97.1

hours per week, compared to 51.7 for those without.

Nearly 50% Fewer

Doctor VisitsAOD seniors with home care averaged 10.2 doctor visits

per year versus 19.2 for those without home care.

Fewer Hospital

AdmissionsAOD seniors receiving home care had a 58%

rate of in-patient hospital admissions,

compared to 66% for those without.

SOURCES: “The Value of Caregiving at Home” – Conducted by the Boomer Project for Home Instead, Inc., franchisor of the Home Instead Senior Care franchise network, this major national study

surveyed more than 1,600 family caregivers across the U.S. Results described here refer to the “more serious” AOD group evaluated.

Page 8: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Kees van der BurgDirector-General, Long-Term Care, Ministry of Health, Welfare

and Sport, The Netherlands

#DefeatingDementia

Page 9: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

KEES VAN DER BURG

Director-General for Long Term Care

Page 10: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Page 11: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Page 12: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Page 13: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Page 14: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
Page 15: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Shekhar SaxenaVisiting Professor, Harvard and Former Director, World Health

Organization

#DefeatingDementia

Page 16: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Care for persons living with dementia:Opportunities and challenges in

LAMICsShekhar Saxena

Harvard T H Chan School of Public Health

Five years since G8

Awareness and planning has progressed; actual services have not.

Page 17: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Integration within UHC

• UHC is a commitment of SDGs and is a rights issue

• UHC is one of the strategic priority of WHO

• UHC is high on national health agendas

• Dementia care needs to be integrated within the entire health system

• A large proportion of care overlaps with care of the elderly

• Integration is less stigmatizing

• Competition with other priorities

Page 18: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Innovation is the key

•Dementia care needs to be culturally appropriate

•Communities need to be involved closely

•Health and social care need to be fully integrated

•Alternative care providers can be (cost-)effective

• Information technologies can play a critical role

Page 19: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Prevention needs to be stepped up

•Prevention must be a component of the care continuum

• LAMICs have more prevention opportunities

•Prevention should be integrated within NCDs prevention

• Early identification is necessary (though exact diagnosis is not)

Page 20: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Elina SuzukiHealth Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation

and Development

#DefeatingDementia

Page 21: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Improving the quality of care for dementia

Elina Suzuki

Health Policy Analyst

OECD

5 December 2018

London

Page 22: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50People with dementia per 1 000 population

2018 2050

The challenge of dementia will continue to grow

Source: OECD analysis, 2018

Page 23: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Significant variation in antipsychotic prescribing across OECD countries

29

.7

30

.5

30

.9

31

.3

33

.7

34

.6

45

.8

47

.6

47

.8 51

.7 55

.7

56.5

58

.2 65

.0

70

.4

75

.0

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100 People with a prescription of antipsychotics per 1000 people 65+

2015 2011

Source: OECD Health Statistics, 2017

Page 24: Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to ... · challenges on the road to 2025 Elina Suzuki Health Policy Analyst, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

Defeating dementia: progress and challenges on the road to 2025

Questions?

#DefeatingDementia