This is what Dr Max Pemberton has to say in today's Telegraph. I must say the bit about the unqualified community support workers sounds rather scary.
I’M NO FRIEND OF THIS DEMENTIA PLAN
A new initiative, termed “Dementia Friends”, was announced last week by the Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, to much fanfare. Under the scheme, a million people will be offered training in how to identify the condition and provide support. There will also be a requirement on all health-care professionals to ask older people about their memory.
On the surface, this all sounds lovely. Actually, it made my blood boil. What is the point of asking about someone’s memory, and training members of the public to nod sympathetically, when the medical services for those with dementia are falling apart at the seams?
I have spent years working in older people’s mental health and dementia care, and have seen first hand the appalling level of under-investment that has gone into this branch of medicine. We already have plenty of community support workers who, in reality, are sent out in place of qualified professionals to check on patients and assess them. They’re doing their best, but they are not doctors.
In the last place I worked, the key workers had no health-care qualifications whatsoever. One was a former car mechanic and another was an unemployed nightclub manager. They were lovely people, but had not a smidgen of medical knowledge – yet they were seeing and assessing the medical needs of frail, vulnerable people.
This is happening up and down the country because such people are so much cheaper to employ than doctors or nurses.
It’s made worse because – unlike with any other chronic disease – dementia patients often find themselves falling under social services, rather than NHS services, meaning that they see a specialist once to get a diagnosis and never again. It is a travesty, and no one speaks out about what’s happening.
So don’t tell me, Mr Hunt, that we all need to be more understanding about dementia. It’s a meaningless, vapid sop to avoid the real changes and investment that needs to take place.