Author Archives: wendy

‘You can’t teach people compassion’

PM hits back as Strictly’s Arlene Phillips says nurses ignored dementia patients

  • David Cameron says funding for research into dementia is to be doubled by 2015
  • One in three over-65s struck down by condition
  • Bonus payments will be made to GPs who diagnose and refer patients

By Sophie Borland and Jason Groves

PUBLISHED: 21:01, 25 March 2012 | UPDATED: 23:24, 26 March 2012
David Cameron was yesterday forced to admit that NHS nurses lack compassion after being confronted by former Strictly Come Dancing judge Arlene Phillips.

The 68-year-old told the Prime Minister how she had witnessed  nurses walking past dementia patients ‘as if they didn’t exist’ when visiting her mother-in-law in hospital over Christmas.

And she revealed how the 84-year-old, who does not suffer from dementia,  had been kept on the same ward in  Hereford Hospital as several Alzheimer’s patients, many of whom were ‘repeatedly calling out for nurses’.

Mrs Phillips, a supporter of the Alzheimer’s Society, who has spoken movingly in the past about her father’s  battle with dementia, claimed ‘every nurse in that ward walked up and down as if they didn’t exist’.

Confronting Mr Cameron during a question and answer session at a conference in London yesterday, she asked: ‘How will you train nurses to care?’

Dementia research funding set to rise to £66m by 2015

Care Services Minister Paul Burstow: “Making dementia a national priority… is the way we can tackle this”

Funding for research into dementia is to be doubled to £66m by 2015 to try to make the UK a world leader in the field, David Cameron will announce.

The prime minister is expected to say in a speech that the level of diagnosis, understanding and awareness of dementia is “shockingly low”.

Dementia is thought to affect around 800,000 people in the UK, with the cost to society estimated at £23bn.

Aylsham Care Trust enjoys ‘dream’ opening of its new £1.2m centre

A pioneering north Norfolk charity has celebrated a milestone in its caring history after opening a new state-of-the-art community building

Lucy Clapham Saturday, March 24, 2012  6:57 PM

The official launch of the Aylsham Care Trust (Act) Centre was dubbed a “dream come true” by the man who spearheaded the £1.2m project.

Rees Coghlan founded the charity in 1985 and has been pushing ever since to improve facilities for the town’s residents, particularly the elderly and disabled.

And his work of more than 25 years culminated today when the centre, on the St Michael’s Hospital site, was formally opened.

It will now provide a range of community services, including hosting regular lunch clubs, offer a space for groups to meet and hold training sessions for students from City College Norwich.