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. 2022 Oct;21(7):2117-2127.
doi: 10.1177/14713012221112234. Epub 2022 Jul 15.

Informal dementia care: The carer's lived experience at the divides between policy and practice

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Informal dementia care: The carer's lived experience at the divides between policy and practice

Anthony Britton et al. Dementia (London). 2022 Oct.

Abstract

Support for informal dementia care at a local community level is not working for most carers today. Carers looking after a person with dementia have long lamented the absence of an empowered named support and an effectively actioned care plan. Drawing on literary writing and social research, we argue in this article that these challenges have existed since dementia emerged as a major condition in the West during the 1980s. Based on this historical context, we ask: Why has this issue persisted over the last four decades? How have healthcare politics and policy initiatives responded to these requests? And what can we learn from this for the current, COVID-19 exacerbated crisis of care? This article focuses on the English context, to discuss these ongoing challenges in the light of a series of policy papers, and to ask what is hampering the implementation of such policy initiatives. In England, local authorities are responsible for dementia support. This article focuses on the situation in a county in the Midlands where one of us (AB) has been lobbying local government for over a decade. The discussion contextualises the lived experience of dementia care within the situation exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, ensuing politics of crises and persistent emphasis on cure over care. We find that the absence on two points centrally challenges care: a joined-up approach between health and social care and adequate information on available care support services, accessible through an empowered named contact. To enhance the lived experience of dementia care, consistent provision of individual named support and professional care support, as and when required, should become essential to local implementation of the care policy.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Department of Health and Social Care; dementia; health care; local authorities; policy; spouse.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Interest: The author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: AB serves on a county advisory committee for commissioning and represents dementia within a county in the Midlands on the Third and Public Sector Partnership Group TAPSPG.

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