Today we’re launching Dementia Citizens, a platform that connects researchers and those affected by dementia to help find ways to improve care.
There are 850,000 people with dementia in the UK, and this is expected to increase to over 1 million by 2025*. Not only is there is no cure, but we know much less than we would like about how to care for people with dementia. We need to learn faster. Today Nesta is launching Dementia Citizens, a platform that brings together researchers and those affected by dementia to help find ways to improve care.
We believe digital technology has massive potential to help achieve this. There are smartphones and wearable devices in most homes in Britain, capable of gathering huge amounts data that could be of very valuable to researchers. Also the cognitive stimulation that helps people with dementia - such as music, reminiscence, art and so on - can be delivered digitally. Finally, we’re believers in the generosity of the public, and believe that research participation can be even higher than it is now.
Bringing these together, we’ve partnered with the Department of Health, Alzheimer's Research UK, and Alzheimer’s Society to launch this initiative. Dementia Citizens is a platform that brings together researchers and those affected by dementia to help find ways to improve care. The idea is to team up with researchers to build engaging and evidence based apps that:
Today, we’re really pleased to launch beta versions of of our first two apps on iOS, focused on music and reminiscence. Playlist for Life, backed by Glasgow Caledonian University, helps people with dementia and their carers, find music that has meaning. Book of You, backed by Bangor University, helps people assemble images, text and sound about meaningful places and events. Both of these support not just the person with dementia, but, we hope, their relationship with the people around them.
We’re hoping to show three things over this beta phase:
Pound for pound, this is one of Nesta’s more ambitious projects. But we’ve done a lot of testing and work over the last 9 months - see this blog by our development partners Ctrl group - and believe we’re well on the way to showing the potential for this mode of research.
We’d like to go further in future: Greater co-production with people affected by dementia, Android as well as iOS, more partnerships with researchers, and a collaborative effort to share and improve the code and designs that make this sort of research possible.
So please continue to watch this space. And if you’re a person with dementia, or caring for one, and would like to participate in one of our research studies, please sign up at www.dementiacitizens.org