Alzheimer’s Society funded study reveals a third of people with dementia and two thirds of carers feel lonely
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Alzheimer’s Society predicts rise in high rates of loneliness due to coronavirus pandemic as it asks for support for Emergency Appeal.
Two studies funded by leading dementia charity Alzheimer’s Society reveal that around a third of people with dementia and two thirds of carers of people with dementia already experience loneliness, with numbers expected to rise as a result of the UK’s coronavirus lockdown.
Research from Improving the Experience of Dementia and Enhancing Active Life (IDEAL)1 programme at the University of Exeter is one of the first large scale studies to look at loneliness specifically in the carers of people living with dementia. 1,283 family carers of people with dementia living in the community were interviewed – nearly half (44%) reported moderate loneliness and around a fifth (18%) severe loneliness. Carers who reported loneliness tended to have smaller social networks, lower life satisfaction and more caregiving stress.
Additionally, this is also one of a very few studies to explore the effect of loneliness on people living with dementia. 1547 people with mild to moderate dementia who are living in the community were interviewed: around a third (30%) reported moderate loneliness. People experiencing depression and living alone are more likely to report feeling lonely. Currently, there is up to an estimated 120,0002 people living alone with dementia in the UK.
In total, around 850,000 UK people have been diagnosed with dementia and the around 700,000 people are family carers. The current pandemic poses a significant risk for people living with dementia - around 95% of people with dementia are over 65, many with underlying health conditions, and they largely rely on social care for support, which was already in crisis. With increased social isolation a significant reason behind high rates of loneliness, Alzheimer’s Society is concerned that rates of loneliness will surge under the impact of coronavirus – as people affected by dementia deal with the suspension of all face-to-face services, reduction in care workers and the impact of isolation, which is also causing people’s condition to deteriorate as symptoms increase and abilities are lost through lack of use.
Demand is increasing for Alzheimer’s Society’s vital services and support, as people with dementia are unable to get access to essential care and supplies, suffering huge anxiety and distress by losing their much-needed routines and fearful of their condition worsening because of a lack of social contact. The charity is also hearing from family carers unable to visit in person, worrying that those they care for are experiencing abuse from others if they fail to remember social distancing rules, and struggling as they can no longer get any respite.
Around 80% of calls to Alzheimer’s Society’s Dementia Connect support line have been about coronavirus issues and in March alone, over 4,0003 calls were made. People with dementia are telling us Dementia Advisers are a lifeline for them, offering expert advice and emotional support. The charity, like others hard-hit by the current situation, has launched an Emergency Appeal to raise much-needed funds to increase telephone support to those who need it most. We’re also working hard to continue existing services remotely, such as Singing for the Brain.
Alzheimer’s Society co-ordinated a campaign group of leading charities and Care England to demand that the social care sector is put on an equal footing with the NHS, asking for Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and testing for care homes, and for faster and more efficient methods of recording deaths in these settings, amid concerns that care home staff and residents with dementia are being abandoned. More than 400,000 people are living in care homes in the UK and 70% have dementia, yet Alzheimer’s Society has warned that social care has ‘yet again fallen to the bottom of the pile’. Recent statistics from ONS state show a 300% rise in care home deaths to 1,000 deaths 10 April, with DHSC/CQC estimating a doubling of this –a further 2,000 deaths - over the Easter weekend alone.
Kate Lee, Chief Executive Officer at Alzheimer’s Society said: “The loneliness so many people affected by dementia were experiencing before the nation was put in lockdown is frightening and as a charity, we’re extremely concerned at the further impact coronavirus will have on these figures, with people feeling so much more cut off.
“Having a dementia diagnosis, or caring for someone with the condition, should never mean people feel abandoned with nowhere to turn. Alzheimer's Society is determined to do our best through services like our Dementia Connect support line to make sure no-one affected by dementia is left alone, but our funding has been badly hit. We’re grateful for every penny we receive to help us support people with dementia, and those that care for them, through this difficult time.”
The IDEAL programme has also produced a new leaflet to support people affected by dementia at this time, developed using the latest robust research and with the input of people affected by dementia. The leaflet is part-funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). Professor Linda Clare, of the University of Exeter Medical School, who led the project, said: “People with dementia and their family carers are disproportionately affected by social distancing, isolation and lockdown. Our research tells us that many people living with dementia and carers felt isolated and lonely before COVID-19, and now these feelings will be amplified. It’s really essential that we develop new and robust ways of offering supporting people with dementia and carers during this crisis.”
Donations to Alzheimer’s Society’s Emergency Appeal can be made online through our website at alzheimers.org.uk/coronavirus-appeal
Via the Dementia Connect support line on 0333 150 3456, Alzheimer’s Society Dementia Advisers provide information and practical measures on how to stay safe, active and social during this difficult time. Phone lines are open 7 days a week.