developing a person-centered model of care for …...y 1 dementia care: person-centered clinical...

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LONDON 9 & 10 MAY 2013 DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR THE PATIENT WITH DEMENTIA A global project of the International Conference and Publication Series on Person-Centered Healthcare www.pchealthcare.org.uk MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF PLOVDIV

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Page 1: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

LONDON9 & 10 MAY 2013

DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR THE PATIENT

WITH DEMENTIA

A global project of theInternational Conference and Publication Series

on Person-Centered Healthcarewww.pchealthcare.org.uk

MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF PLOVDIV

Page 2: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

The inaugural international conference on developing a person-centered model of care for

the patient with dementia has been organised by:

Imperial College London

The organisers extend grateful thanks to Clere Ltd (www.clere.uk.com) for their major pro bono contribution to the ICPSPCH Website Development

Page 3: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

The 1st International Conference on Developing a Person-Centered Approach to the Management of the Patient with Dementia

Dear colleagues

The dementia conference is the inaugural conference in the International Conference and Publication Series on Person Centered Healthcare, a major initiative of the International College for Person Centered Medicine, a global body of distinguished clinicians and scientists working in collaboration with the World Health Organisation, World Medical Association, World Organization of Family Doctors (Wonca), International Federation for Medical Education, International Council of Nurses, International Alliance of Patients Organizations and a wide variety of other worldwide clinical organisations and patient advocacy associations.

The conference has been designed with reference to WHO imperatives for the development of person and people-centered clinical services worldwide and in accordance with the provisions of the 2012 Geneva Declaration on Person-centered Care for Chronic Diseases (see Appendix). The conference will bring together leading colleagues working in all areas of dementia care internationally to establish a pathway for the construction of dementia care and services by building upon current work by the international community in the dementia field and enhancing this through the direct application of the principles and recently advanced methods of person-centered care.

A key activity as part of the dementia project will be the formal consideration of how a humanistic framework of medical, health and social care can be designed and operationalized which applies both science and humanity in a manner that recognises the patient as a person and which responds as fully to his/her psychological, emotional and spiritual requirements as to his/her physical and organic needs. The conference will have a strong methodological emphasis, with key considerations of service re-configuration/re-design, medical informatics/data capture, clinical education and a range of other central factors of relevance to increasing the person-centeredness of dementia care.

A case-based Masterclass has also been built into the programme to illustrate the practical application of the general principles of person-centered care to individual patients. The conference debates and consensuses and all of the clinical, organisational and policy data will be published as a special Supplement of the International Journal of Person Centered Medicine for direct discussion with and policy action by Member States of WHO and others.

We are indebted to our colleagues and friends who gave of their time, expertise and advice in contribution to the planning of conference content and the nomination of speakers and chairmen. We extend grateful thanks to the international clinical organisations and patient advocacy associations that have supported and continue to support this work in dementia: World Medical Association, Alzheimer’s Disease International, INTERDEM, World Federation for Medical Education, World Federation of Neurology, World Federation for Mental Health, International Council of Nurses, European Psychiatric Association, European Association of Geriatric Psychiatry, International Alliance of Patients Organizations, EUFAMI, IPA and the British Society of Gerontology.

We hope to have the opportunity of meeting you at the conference which, together with the major publication that will derive from it - we advance as an important contribution to the transformation of dementia services in accordance with the person-centered model of care.

Professor Andrew Miles MSc MPhil PhD Professor Jon Snaedal MDDirector, ICPSPCH Chairman, Expert Planning CommitteeImperial College London UK National University Hospital of Iceland([email protected]) ([email protected])

Page 4: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

PRE-

CO

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Para

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Page 5: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 3

– B

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TIEN

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UR

NEY

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS

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licym

akin

g a

nd

dem

enti

a: In

tern

atio

nal

per

spec

tive

sPr

ofes

sor

Mar

tin P

rince

, Pro

fess

or o

f Ep

idem

iolo

gica

l Psy

chia

try,

Inst

itute

of

Psyc

hiat

ry, K

ing’

s C

olle

ge L

ondo

n an

d C

entr

e fo

r G

loba

l Men

tal H

ealth

, Lon

don

Scho

ol o

f H

ygie

ne a

nd T

ropi

cal M

edic

ine,

Lon

don

UK

6.20

Pan

el D

iscu

ssio

n w

ith

Del

egat

e Pa

rtic

ipat

ion

6.30

Clo

se o

f D

ay 1

7.45

CO

NFE

REN

CE

DIN

NER

: 9 M

AY

201

3 at

7.4

5 PM

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 2

- B

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. Ad

dit

ion

al P

ersp

ecti

ves

Chai

rman

: Pro

fess

or E

sme

Mon

iz-C

ook,

Pro

fess

or o

f Clin

ical

Psy

chol

ogy,

Dem

entia

App

lied

Rese

arch

Cen

tre,

Uni

vers

ity o

f Hul

l, U

K

1.20

The

CH

OIC

E &

PA

NIC

OA

Stu

die

s o

f A

bu

se a

nd

Neg

lect

in C

ares

Ho

mes

D

r. A

nne

Kill

ett,

Lec

ture

r in

Occ

upat

iona

l The

rapy

, Uni

vers

ity E

ast

Ang

lia, E

ngla

nd, U

K

1.40

Imp

lem

enti

ng

occ

up

atio

nal

th

erap

y fo

r p

atie

nts

wit

h d

emen

tia

and

th

eir

care

giv

ers

Dr.

Mau

d G

raff

, Sci

entifi

c Re

sear

cher

in A

llied

Hea

lthca

re R

esea

rch,

Uni

vers

ity M

edic

al C

entr

e, N

ijmeg

en, T

he

Net

herla

nds.

2.00

Clin

ical

ed

uca

tio

n a

nd

tra

inin

g f

or

hea

lth

an

d s

oci

al c

are

pro

fess

ion

als

To b

e an

noun

ced

2.20

The

dif

ficu

ltie

s o

f m

anag

ing

peo

ple

wit

h d

emen

tia

in t

he

com

mu

nit

y an

d h

ow

to

ove

rco

me

them

Prof

esso

r Ja

ne S

alva

ge, C

hair,

Que

ens

Nur

sing

Inst

itute

, Lon

don,

UK

2.40

Pan

el D

iscu

ssio

n w

ith

Del

egat

e Pa

rtic

ipat

ion

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 2

– A

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. Th

erap

euti

c Pe

rsp

ecti

ves

Ch

airm

an: P

rofe

ssor

Jon

Sna

edal

, Mem

ory

Clin

ic, D

epar

tmen

t of

Ger

iatr

ics,

Nat

iona

l Uni

vers

ity H

ospi

tal o

f Ic

elan

d, R

eykj

avik

1.20

Phar

mac

olo

gic

al m

anag

emen

t o

f co

gn

itiv

e an

d b

ehav

iou

ral s

ymp

tom

s: c

urr

ent

per

spec

tive

sPr

ofes

sor

Cliv

e Ba

llard

, Pro

fess

or o

f A

ge-r

elat

ed D

isea

ses,

Wol

fson

Cen

tre

for

Age

Rel

ated

Dis

ease

s, S

choo

l of

Biom

edic

al a

nd H

ealth

Sci

ence

s, K

ing’

s C

olle

ge L

ondo

n U

K

1.50

Cu

rren

t cl

inic

al t

rial

s an

d e

mer

gin

g r

esea

rch

evi

den

ce f

or

dis

ease

mo

difi

cati

on

an

d d

emen

tia

man

agem

ent

Dr.

Rich

ard

Perr

y, C

onsu

ltant

Neu

rolo

gist

/ Se

nior

Lec

ture

r, Im

peria

l Col

lege

Hea

lthca

re N

HS

Trus

t, L

ondo

n U

K

2.20

No

n-p

har

mac

olo

gic

al m

anag

emen

t o

f b

ehav

iou

ral s

ymp

tom

sD

r. Ia

n Ja

mes

, Hea

d, N

ewca

stle

Cha

lleng

ing

Beha

viou

r Te

am &

Con

sulta

nt C

linic

al P

sych

olog

ist,

Cen

tre

for

the

Hea

lth o

f th

e El

derly

, New

cast

le U

K

2.40

Pan

el D

iscu

ssio

n w

ith

Del

egat

e Pa

rtic

ipat

ion

Page 6: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

DA

Y 2

: 10

MA

Y 2

013

PLEN

ARY

3

INTE

RN

ATI

ON

AL

PER

SPEC

TIV

ES IN

CA

RE,

PO

LIC

YM

AK

ING

AN

D E

THIC

S

7.15

CO

FFEE

AN

D R

EGIS

TRA

TIO

N

8.30

OPE

NIN

G A

DD

RES

SPr

ofes

sor

Juan

Mez

zich

, Pro

fess

or o

f Ps

ychi

atry

, Mou

nt S

inai

Med

ical

Sch

ool,

New

Yor

k U

nive

rsity

& P

resi

dent

, Int

erna

tiona

l Col

lege

of

Pers

on C

ente

red

Med

icin

e / F

orm

er P

resi

dent

, Wor

ld P

sych

iatr

ic A

ssoc

iatio

n

Ch

airm

an: P

rofe

ssor

And

rew

Mile

s, E

dito

r-in

-Chi

ef, I

nter

natio

nal J

ourn

al o

f Pe

rson

Cen

tere

d M

edic

ine

and

Jour

nal o

f Ev

alua

tion

in C

linic

al P

ract

ice,

Wor

ld H

ealth

Org

anis

atio

n C

olla

bora

ting

Cen

tre

for

Publ

ic H

ealth

Edu

catio

n an

d Tr

aini

ng, F

acul

ty o

f M

edic

ine,

Impe

rial

Col

lege

Lon

don,

UK

, D

irect

or, I

nter

natio

nal C

onfe

renc

e an

d Pu

blic

atio

n Se

ries

on P

erso

n-C

ente

red

Hea

lthca

re; V

isiti

ng P

rofe

ssor

, Uni

vers

ity o

f M

ilan,

Ital

y; M

edic

al U

nive

rsity

of

Plov

div

and

the

Uni

vers

ity o

f So

fia, B

ulga

ria; D

istin

guis

hed

Aca

dem

icia

n, N

atio

nal A

cade

my

of

Scie

nces

and

Art

s of

Bul

garia

& S

enio

r Fe

llow

, New

Yor

k A

cade

my

of M

edic

ine,

USA

8.40

Dev

elo

pin

g a

Man

ifes

to f

or

Val

ues

-Bas

ed P

ract

ice

in D

emen

tia:

co

nce

ptu

al b

asis

an

d o

per

atio

nal

pro

gre

ss

Prof

esso

r Bi

ll (K

W M

) Ful

ford

, Pro

fess

or o

f Ph

iloso

phy

and

Men

tal H

ealth

, Uni

vers

ity o

f W

arw

ick

& D

istin

guis

hed

Rese

arch

Fel

low

, Cen

tre

for

Prac

tical

Eth

ics,

Uni

vers

ity o

f O

xfor

d, U

K, M

r. To

by W

illia

mso

n, M

enta

l Hea

lth F

ound

atio

n, L

ondo

n an

d Pr

ofes

sor

Julia

n H

ughe

s,

Prof

esso

r of

Phi

loso

phy

of A

gein

g, In

stitu

te o

f A

gein

g an

d H

ealth

, Uni

vers

ity o

f N

ewca

stle

, UK

9.20

The

art

and

sci

ence

of

bal

anci

ng

car

e an

d c

om

pas

sio

n in

th

e p

erso

n w

ith

dem

enti

a: a

met

ho

do

log

ical

per

spec

tive

fro

m t

he

Un

ited

Sta

tes

of

Am

eric

a D

r. St

ephe

n G

. Pos

t, P

rofe

ssor

of

Prev

entiv

e M

edic

ine/

Hea

d of

the

Div

isio

n of

Med

icin

e in

Soc

iety

& D

irect

or, C

entr

e fo

r M

edic

al H

uman

ities

, Com

pass

iona

te C

are

and

Bioe

thic

s, S

tony

Bro

ok U

nive

rsity

, New

Yor

k, U

SA

9.50

Pan

el D

iscu

ssio

n w

ith

Del

egat

e Pa

rtic

ipat

ion

POSTERS PRESENTATIONS

10.1

0BR

EAK

AN

D R

EFRE

SHM

ENTS

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 4

– B

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. In

terv

enti

on

s th

at c

an h

elp

mai

nta

in t

he

effe

ctiv

enes

s o

f ca

re a

nd

q

ual

ity

of

life

- B

Ch

airm

an:

Prof

esso

r Ju

an M

ezzi

ch, P

rofe

ssor

of

Psyc

hiat

ry, M

ount

Sin

ai M

edic

al S

choo

l, N

ew Y

ork

Uni

vers

ity &

Pr

esid

ent,

Inte

rnat

iona

l Col

lege

of

Pers

on C

ente

red

Med

icin

e / F

orm

er P

resi

dent

, Wor

ld P

sych

iatr

ic A

ssoc

iatio

n

10.4

0Pr

eser

vati

on

of

per

son

ho

od

an

d id

enti

fy r

ehab

ilita

tio

n in

dem

enti

aD

r. Li

nda

Cla

re, P

rofe

ssor

of

Clin

ical

Neu

rops

ycho

logy

, Uni

vers

ity o

f Ba

ngor

, Wal

es, U

K

11.0

0C

ult

ura

lly-s

ensi

tive

car

e in

th

e m

anag

emen

t o

f th

e p

erso

n w

ith

dem

enti

aM

s. J

enni

fer

Mac

Ken

zie,

Sen

ior

Lect

urer

,Br

adfo

rd D

emen

tia G

roup

, Uni

vers

ity o

f Br

adfo

rd, U

K

11.2

0Sp

irit

ual

an

d r

elig

iou

s ca

re in

th

e m

anag

emen

t o

f th

e p

erso

n w

ith

dem

enti

aPr

ofes

sor

Pete

r C

olem

an, P

rofe

ssor

of

Psyc

hoge

ront

olog

y, U

nive

rsity

of

Sout

ham

pton

, UK

11.4

0M

axim

izin

g t

he

per

son

-cen

tere

dn

ess

of

pal

liati

on

an

d e

nd

of

life

care

Ms.

Kar

en H

arris

on D

enin

g, H

ead

of A

dmira

l Nur

sing

, Adm

iral N

ursi

ng A

cade

my,

Har

ringe

y, U

K

12.0

0Pa

nel

Dis

cuss

ion

wit

h D

eleg

ate

Part

icip

atio

n

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 4

– A

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. A

cute

car

e, li

fe n

arra

tive

s, c

are

cham

pio

ns

and

em

oti

on

al

man

agem

ent

Ch

airm

an: D

r. D

ross

i Sto

yano

v, A

ssoc

iate

Pro

fess

or a

nd C

onsu

ltant

Psy

chia

tris

t, F

acul

ty o

f M

edic

ine,

Med

ical

Uni

vers

ity

of P

lovd

iv, B

ulga

ria

10.4

0

The

Old

er P

eop

le in

Acu

te C

are

Co

llab

ora

tive

- u

sin

g t

he

IHI B

reak

thro

ug

h S

erie

s M

eth

od

olo

gy

to im

pro

ve

the

exp

erie

nce

of

old

er p

eop

le w

ith

dem

enti

a an

d t

hei

r ca

rers

wh

ile in

acu

te c

are

Dr.

Ces

ar R

odrig

uez,

Con

sulta

nt in

Old

Age

Psy

chia

try,

Sun

nysi

de R

oyal

Hos

pita

l, M

ontr

ose

& A

D (U

K) C

entr

e of

Ex

celle

nce

for

AD

Res

earc

h, U

nive

rsity

of

Dun

dee,

Sco

tland

and

Ms.

Dia

ne C

ampb

ell,

OA

PC C

olla

bora

tive

Dire

ctor

, Sc

otla

nd U

K

11.0

0

You

r St

ory

Mat

ters

: res

ult

s fr

om

th

e tr

ain

ing

of

500

peo

ple

in L

ife

Sto

ry w

ork

info

rmed

by

a h

um

an r

igh

ts

per

spec

tive

D

r. Po

lly K

aise

r, C

onsu

ltant

Clin

ical

Psy

chol

ogis

t, P

enni

ne C

are

NH

S Tr

ust

& N

atio

nal L

ead

for

Men

tal H

ealth

in L

ater

Li

fe, N

atio

nal M

enta

l Hea

lth D

evel

opm

ent

Uni

t U

K

11.2

0

The

form

atio

n o

f p

erso

n-c

ente

red

dem

enti

a ca

re c

ham

pio

ns

in t

he

role

mo

del

ling

of

op

tim

al p

ract

ice

and

in

chal

len

gin

g q

ual

ity

defi

cits

Ms

Tany

a Li

ttle

, Con

sulta

nt a

nd T

rain

er, D

emen

tia C

are

Prac

tice

Dev

elop

men

t, B

radf

ord

Dem

entia

Gro

up, U

nive

rsity

of

Brad

ford

, UK

11.4

0St

rate

gie

s fo

r th

e p

reve

nti

on

an

d e

arly

det

ecti

on

of

bu

rn-o

ut

as p

art

of

emo

tio

nal

lab

ou

r m

anag

emen

tD

r. D

ross

i Sto

yano

v, A

ssoc

iate

Pro

fess

or a

nd C

onsu

ltant

Psy

chia

tris

t, F

acul

ty o

f M

edic

ine,

Med

ical

Uni

vers

ity o

f Pl

ovdi

v,

Bulg

aria

12.0

0Pa

nel

Dis

cuss

ion

wit

h D

eleg

ate

Part

icip

atio

n

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

12.2

0 L

UN

CH

EON

Page 7: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 6

– B

. M

AST

ERC

LASS

IN P

ERSO

N-C

ENTE

RED

DEM

ENTI

A C

AR

E: A

pp

lyin

g t

he

pri

nci

ple

s o

f PC

M t

o

ind

ivid

ual

pat

ien

ts: P

art

II

Ch

airm

an o

f th

e Ex

per

t Pa

nel

: Pro

fess

or D

awn

Broo

ker,

Dire

ctor

, Ass

ocia

tion

for

Dem

entia

Stu

dies

, Uni

vers

ity o

f W

orce

ster

, UK

3.30

Clin

ical

Cas

e 6

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

3.50

Clin

ical

Cas

e 7

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

4.10

Clin

ical

Cas

e 8

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

4.30

Clin

ical

Cas

e 9

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

4.50

Clin

ical

Cas

e 10

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

POSTERPRESENTATIONS

3.00

BREA

K A

ND

REF

RESH

MEN

TS

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 6

– A

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. Ev

alu

atin

g a

nd

imp

rovi

ng

th

e q

ual

ity

and

per

son

-cen

tere

dn

ess

of

clin

ical

ser

vice

s

Ch

airm

an: P

rofe

ssor

And

rew

Mile

s, E

dito

r- in

-Chi

ef, I

nter

natio

nal J

ourn

al o

f Per

son

Cen

tere

d M

edic

ine

and

Jour

nal o

f Ev

alua

tion

in C

linic

al P

ract

ice,

WH

O C

olla

bora

ting

Cen

tre

for P

ublic

Hea

lth E

duca

tion

& T

rain

ing,

Impe

rial C

olle

ge L

ondo

n, U

K

3.30

Au

dit

ing

th

e q

ual

ity

of

dem

enti

a se

rvic

es

Prof

esso

r Pe

ter

Cro

me,

Pro

fess

or o

f G

eria

tric

Med

icin

e &

Cha

irman

, Nat

iona

l Aud

it of

Dem

entia

Ste

erin

g G

roup

& P

resi

dent

-el

ect,

Brit

ish

Ger

iatr

ics

Soci

ety,

Uni

vers

ity o

f K

eele

, UK

3.50

Mea

suri

ng

th

e q

ual

ity

of

care

of

peo

ple

wit

h d

emen

tia

– W

hic

h in

dic

ato

rs?

Prof

esso

r M

yrra

Ver

nooi

j-Das

sen,

Dire

ctor

, Nijm

egen

Alz

heim

er C

entr

e, N

ethe

rland

s &

Cha

irman

, IN

TERD

EM

4.10

Met

ho

ds

for

colle

ctin

g p

erso

n-r

elat

ed d

ata

in t

he

age

of

the

elec

tro

nic

med

ical

rec

ord

Pr

ofes

sor

Jere

my

Wya

tt, P

rofe

ssor

of

eHea

lth In

nova

tion

& D

irect

or, I

nstit

ute

for

Dig

ital H

ealth

Car

e, U

nive

rsity

of

War

wic

k, U

K

4.30

Imp

rovi

ng

th

e g

ener

al q

ual

ity

of

dem

enti

a se

rvic

es: h

ow

do

we

‘hea

r’ t

he

voic

e o

f th

e p

erso

n w

ith

d

emen

tia

in o

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ter,

UK

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POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Refr

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ly o

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PLEN

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4

PER

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AN

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for

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Epi

dem

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ondo

n U

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eco

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cu

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Prof

esso

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of N

euro

biol

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for

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, Dep

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of H

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, UK

and

Pro

fess

or o

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6.00

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oo

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alu

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rop

e (A

LCO

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6.20

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ith

Del

egat

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rtic

ipat

ion

6.30

Clo

sin

g A

dd

ress

& S

ynth

esis

. Wh

at h

as t

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con

fere

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an

d d

ebat

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ug

ht

us?

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esso

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w M

iles,

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in-C

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of

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and

Trai

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, Fac

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of

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peria

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lege

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don,

U

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Dire

ctor

, Int

erna

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fere

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and

Publ

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Serie

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Per

son-

Cen

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d H

ealth

care

; Vis

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Pro

fess

or, U

nive

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of

Mila

n, It

aly;

Med

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Uni

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ity o

f Pl

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nive

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of

Sofia

, Bul

garia

; Dis

tingu

ishe

d A

cade

mic

ian,

Nat

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dem

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ence

s an

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of

Bulg

aria

& N

ew Y

ork

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dem

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Med

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SA

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 5

– B

. M

AST

ERC

LASS

IN P

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N–C

ENTE

RED

DEM

ENTI

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AR

E: A

pp

lyin

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pri

nci

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s o

f PC

M t

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pat

ien

ts: P

art

I

Ch

airm

an o

f th

e Ex

per

t Pa

nel

: Pro

fess

or J

on S

naed

al, M

emor

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linic

, Dep

artm

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of G

eria

tric

s, N

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nive

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H

ospi

tal o

f Ic

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e 1

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dis

cuss

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and

reco

mm

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1.40

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e 2

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

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2.00

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e 3

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

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2.20

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ical

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e 4

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

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and

reco

mm

enda

tions

2.40

Clin

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Cas

e 5

Pres

enta

tion,

dis

cuss

ion

and

reco

mm

enda

tions

POSTER PRESENTATIONS

Para

llel 5

– A

. TH

E PA

TIEN

T JO

UR

NEY

. M

eth

od

s to

imp

rove

th

e d

om

esti

c, h

osp

ital

an

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are

ho

me

en

viro

nm

ent

as f

acto

rs f

or

imp

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th

e ke

y p

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n-c

ente

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nes

s o

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re

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airm

an: M

r. Pe

ter

Mol

yneu

x, C

hairm

an, S

outh

Wes

t Lo

ndon

and

St.

Geo

rge’

s M

enta

l Hea

lth T

rust

, Lon

don

UK

1.20

Pers

on

-cen

tere

d d

emen

tia

care

an

d t

he

imp

ort

ance

of

assi

stiv

e te

chn

olo

gy

in k

eep

ing

th

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ith

d

emen

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at h

om

ePr

ofes

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Alis

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& H

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Sc

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1.40

The

dem

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per

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Dr.

Dar

yl L

eung

, Clin

ical

Dire

ctor

, Car

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the

Eld

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, New

Cro

ss H

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tal,

Wol

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on, E

ngla

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2.00

Stra

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per

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of

care

peo

ple

wit

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in r

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Mic

hael

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low

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Ser

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opm

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Cen

tre,

Uni

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ity o

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ngor

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2.20

The

virt

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dem

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use

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ion

Page 8: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

GENERAL INFORMATION

About the International Conference and Publication Series on Person-Centered Healthcare (ICPSPCH)ICPSPCH is a new and major initiative of the International College of Person Centered Medicine (ICPCM), a global body of physicians, nurses, allied health professionals, academics and health scientists supported in its work by the World Health Organisation (WHO), the World Medical Association (WMA), the World Organisation of Family Doctors (WONCA), the World Federation for Medical Education (WFME), the International Council of Nurses (ICN) and the International Alliance of Patients Organisations (IAPO), together with some 30 other international clinical organisations and patient advocacy associations

About the ConferenceThe dementia conference is the first in the new Series and has been designed with reference to WHO imperatives for the development of personalised clinical services worldwide and in accordance with the provisions of the 2012 Geneva Declaration on Person-centered Care for Chronic Diseases. The conference will bring together leading colleagues working in all areas of dementia care internationally to establish a pathway for the construction of dementia care and services by building upon current work by the international community in the dementia field and enhancing this through the direct application of the principles and recently advanced methods of person-centered care. A key activity as part of the dementia conference will be the formal consideration of how a humanistic framework of medical, health and social care can be designed and operationalized which applies both science and humanity in a manner that recognises the patient as a person and which responds as fully to his/her psychological, emotional and spiritual requirements as to his/her physical and organic needs. The conference will have a strong methodological emphasis, with key considerations of service re-configuration/re-design, medical informatics/data capture, clinical education and a range of other central factors of relevance to increasing the person-centeredness of care. A case-based Masterclass has also been built into the programme to illustrate the practical application of the general principles and methods of person-centered care to a wide range of individual patients.

Who should attend?Neurologists, Psychogeriatricians, Geriatricians, Psychiatrists, Family Physicians with a special interest in the care of the person with dementia and Trainees across all of these specialties. Clinical Psychologists, Specialist Nurses, Occupational Therapists, Physiotherapists, Social Workers, Care Home Dementia Directors and associated staff, academic staff and researchers into dementia, health service policymakers, members of Industry and all those colleagues with a responsibility for or interest in the construction and provision of person-centered dementia services.

VenueThe De Vere Venues Canary Wharf, 1 Westferry Circus, Canary Wharf, London E14 4HA

Fee and PaymentThe fee for attendance is shown on the Registration Form. Fees include luncheon, mid-session refreshments and all conference materials. Payment can be made by personal or institutional cheque and sent to the postal address shown at the bottom of the registration form or via the PayPal function of the website www.pchealthcare.org.uk Non-UK payments can also be made via an international bankers draft or a money order in pounds sterling drawn on a UK Bank. To be invoiced for the fee contact [email protected]

EnquiriesAll enquiries in relation to the administrative aspects of this conference should be made to Mr. Francesco Scordamaglia at: [email protected] or telephone +44 (0) 20 7222 2905. Enquiries of an academic or clinical or sponsorship nature may be made to Professor Andrew Miles, Director of the Conference Series, at: [email protected]. The right to make changes in the programme due to operational necessity is reserved.

CancellationsCancellations will only be accepted in writing by e-mail. A refund less an administrative charge of £25 will be given on cancellations made by 29 March 2013. Thereafter, the full fee is payable. Substitutions may be made at any time. No refunds can be given after 29 March 2013 for cancellations arising from industrial action or acts of terrorism.

CPD accreditationCPD accreditation has been applied for and formal Certificates of Attendance will be available.

Data ProtectionYour name, current postal and hospital address (or correspondence address given) will be included in the list of participants which will be issued to delegates and speakers.

AccommodationDetails of a range of good quality London hotels within easy reach of the Conference Venue will be provided to delegates on receipt of successful registration

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R E G I S T R A T I O N F O R M

Developing a Person-Centered Model of Care for the Patient with Dementia: [Inaugural project on dementia within the International Conference and Publication Series on Person Centered Healthcare]

London UK: 9 & 10 May 2013

Registration fees:[Fees may be paid by cheque, via PayPal or via an Invoice - see ‘Fee and Payment’ under General Information]

Please select:

Days 1 & 2Medical Staff: £450.Non-medical clinical staff & Academics: £350.Students: £175. Members of Industry: £550.

Day 1Medical Staff: £250.Non-medical clinical staff & Academics: £200.Students: £95. Members of Industry: £350.

Day 2Medical Staff: £250.Non-medical clinical staff & Academics: £200.Students: £95. Members of Industry: £350.

Social eventsPre-conference Reception: £40.Conference Dinner: £75.Pre-conference Reception and Conference Dinner: £100.Total =

Please pay: Person Centered Healthcare LtdTitle (Mr/Mrs/Ms/Dr/Prof/etc) ____________________________________Surname _____________________________________________________Forename(s) __________________________________________________Post _________________________________________________________Department __________________________________________________Hospital ______________________________________________________Address for correspondence _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Town ________________________________________________________County _______________________________ Postcode _______________Country (if not UK) ____________________________________________Daytime telephone number _____________________________________Daytime fax number ___________________________________________E-mail address ________________________________________________Where did you see this meeting advertised (e.g. society mailing or journal advertisement)? Any special dietary requirements? ________________________________

Please tick this box if you do not want to receive further information about educational events in the International Conference and Publication Series on Person-Centered Healthcare (ICPSPCH)

Please return this form with a cheque made payable to: Person Centered Healthcare Ltd to: Mr Francesco Scordamaglia, ICPSPCHP.O. Box 64457, London SE11 9ANTelephone: +44 (0)20 7222 2905Email: [email protected]

Person Centered Healthcare Ltd, Registered in England No. 05798138

Registered Office: 22 Westminster Mansions, Great Smith Street, London SW1P 3BP

Page 10: DEVELOPING A PERSON-CENTERED MODEL OF CARE FOR …...Y 1 DEMENTIA CARE: PERSON-CENTERED CLINICAL PRACTICE AND PEOPLE – CENTERED PUBLIC HEA L TH 7.15 COFFEE AND REGISTR A TION 8.25

The 21st century is emerging as the century of person-centered care, and this perspective is especially compelling concerning chronic diseases. As the World Health Organization and the United Nations have recently documented and proposed, every government and component of society needs to act now to combat the growing epidemic of chronic and non-communicable diseases that threaten the lives and quality of living for so many people around the world. What we must emphasize now is that a person-centered approach to the promotion and care of health is crucial to counteract this massive epidemic. People with chronic diseases cannot be effectively cared for without fully engaging them in their own health. Consequently, we believe that bold new approaches to health promotion and illness intervention need to be developed and integrated in our health systems. Furthermore, the patient needs to remain at the heart of these approaches. Effective public health, clinical, medicinal and technological procedures must be developed and implemented having the whole person at the core within a broad biological, psychological and socio-cultural framework. Around a third of the world’s population currently suffers from at least one chronic disease. More than 60% of deaths in 2008 resulted from cardiovascular, cancer, diabetes and respiratory illnesses. A quarter of these deaths occurred in people under the age of 60. Other chronic diseases such as mental and musculoskeletal conditions have disproportionally high disease burden. Death and disability have a devastating effect on individuals, their families and the societies they live in, with wide economic consequences. Four essential components of an effective approach to chronic and non-communicable diseases are:

(i) Monitoring both risk and protective factors (intrinsic and extrinsic; biological, psychological and social)

(ii) Monitoring well-being, including outcomes for positive health (vitality and resilience despite exposure and adversity) and illness (morbidity and disease-specific mortality)

(iii) Individual and population-level responses to engagement in health promotion (utilization of resources for health promotion, adherence to prevention programs, level of knowledge of effective health promotion and maintenance practices, as well as obstacles and resources needed for their actual application in life)

(iv) Health system responses to illness (policies and plans, infrastructure, human resources and access to essential healthcare including medicines and other therapies)

It should never be forgotten that people have risk and protective factors; that people experience vitality and resilience, morbidities and disabilities; that people select the goals and lifestyle practices that they value and should be cared for by services responding to their needs, goals and values. Chronic diseases, the services that seek to tackle them and their wider economic impact ultimately involve persons, each with a unique life story and a unique outlook on life. This shapes their lifestyle colored by their experiences and environments, including the course of their diseases and associated risk and protective factors.

Geneva Declaration on

Person-centered Care for Chronic Diseases

Emerging from the Fifth Geneva Conference on Person-centered Medicine and finalized by the Board of the International College of

Person-centered Medicine on 19 May 2012

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Effective prevention and treatment of diseases should monitor and promote wellbeing and should not be reduced to symptomatic treatment and prevention of diseases and their risk factors, as recognized by WHO’s definition of health. Attention to health promotion is also important to motivate adherence to treatment. People are more easily convinced to maintain actively their wellbeing than to restrain from unhealthy practices leading to disease onset and chronicity. Such a framework of health promotion and illness intervention should take full account of the patient’s life goals, values, stories and aspirations. The application of the person-centered approach should always be empathetic, respectful and empowering to enhance the person’s functioning, resilience and wellbeing through joint understanding and joint decision-making for clinical care and health-promotion.

Thus, the 5th Geneva Conference on Person-centered Medicine issues the following recommendations:

1. Governments should adopt a comprehensive person- and people-centred approach to integration of health promotion and illness intervention to prevent and control chronic diseases. To achieve this, governments should invest in their health systems recognizing that investment in people's health is investment in social welfare, economic prosperity and security.

2. The health sector has a responsibility to champion this and to ensure that health systems are able to engage and respond to the growing burden of chronic diseases. Health services must also be engaged to prevent, diagnose and treat these diseases through the integration of primary care, multidisciplinary specialist services and public health.

3. Person- and people-centred care should be supported by a close collaboration between clinical care and public health. Each person with a chronic disease should be fully engaged in partnership to achieve joint understanding and joint decision-making to prevent and treat such diseases.

4. Health professional organizations must work with their members to advance person-centered health promotion and care. It should also ensure the integration of health and social services.

5. Person-centered public education, professional training and health research are crucial to support effectively clinical care and public health actions for chronic diseases.

6. Last but not least, civil society in general must be engaged in efforts to tackle chronic diseases, as the effectiveness of these efforts will largely rest on the commitment of every person and component of society involved.

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SUPPORTING ORGANISATIONS

World Federation for Medical Education - www.wfme.org

World Medical Association - www.wma.net

World Federation of Neurology - www.wfneurology.org

International Council of Nurses - www.icn.ch

International Psychogeriatric Association - www.ipa-online.org

Alzheimer’s Disease International - www.alz.co.uk

International Alliance of Patients’ Organizations - www.patientsorganizations.org

World Federation for Mental Health - www.wfmh.org

European Association of Geriatric Psychiatry - www.eagp.net

European Psychiatric Association - www.europsy.net

Early detection and timely INTERvention in DEMentia - www.interdem.org

European Federation of Associations of Families of People with Mental Illness - www.eufami.org

Universita’ degli Studi di Milano - www.unimi.it/ENG/

Medical University of Plovdiv - www.meduniversity-plovdiv.bg

British Society of Gerontology - www.britishgerontology.org

International College of Person Centered Medicine - www.personcenteredmedicine.org

WHO Collaborating Centre for Public Health Education and Training, Imperial College London - http://www1.imperial.ac.uk/publichealth/departments/pcph/whocollaboratingcentre/

MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF PLOVDIV