School of Health in Social Science

Game-changing investment in people affected by dementia

A ground-breaking investment of £2.5 million has been announced by the Life Changes Trust.

This investment will create a School of Leadership in Dementia and a National Forum for Dementia Policy and Practice.  Both initiatives will support people with dementia and carers to become experts, leaders and influencers in Scotland.Scotland has already led the way with its three National Dementia Strategies. The creation of the National Forum will bring together people with experience and expertise in dementia, locally and nationally, with the aim of evidencing what will create better lives for people with dementia and unpaid carers. The Forum will provide space to scrutinise policy and practice in many areas, including housing and dementia, sport and dementia, the arts and dementia, and human rights and dementia.

The Forum will promote evidence of what works well so that national and local policy and practice can be reviewed and, where necessary, adjusted. This is so that Scotland can become an exemplar of how, in all aspects of life, people with dementia can find meaning, be fully supported and involved.

The School of Leadership will bring together people with a particular interest and experience in the subject of dementia to develop their leadership skills so that they can be integral to leading positive change at all levels of society.

The School of Leadership and the Policy and Practice Forum will be delivered collaboratively by Age Scotland, the University of Edinburgh and Queen Margaret University.

 

Being a part of this ground-breaking development to work with people living with dementia and their carers advances the potential for all people in all communities to reach their full potential.  Our work focuses on helping all people to flourish and the Life Changes Trust School of Leadership and Policy & Practice Forum will equip people living with dementia to shape their lives and communities in ways that really matter to them. Having those with lived experience leading and shaping future policy and practice is essential if we are to change their experience for the better.  Both projects will build on and advance existing good practice and grow the potential of new, future leaders to make a real difference to people’s lives.

Professor Heather Wilkinson from the University of Edinburgh and Professor Brendan McCormack, from Queen Margaret University

 

The Life Changes Trust was set up with a Big Lottery Fund endowment of £50 million to improve the lives of two key groups in Scotland: people affected by dementia and care experienced young people.

 

Age Scotland blog post: https://agescotland.wordpress.com/2018/12/11/people-living-with-dementia-and-their-unpaid-carers-at-the-heart-of-new-national-policy-and-practice-forum/ 

Life changes trust article: www.lifechangestrust.org.uk/news/news-game-changing-investment-people-affected-dementia