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Recent Posts
- Dementia-Friendly Communities Provision, Viewed as a Social Determinant of Health (JGCR / NHS England / WHO)
- International Perspectives on the Possible Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Lockdown on Abuse of the Elderly (JGCR / American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry / JAGS)
- Updates Relating to the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care (Lancet / Alzheimer’s Research and Therapy / Alzheimer’s and Dementia)
- A Brief Review of How the COVID-19 Pandemic Relates to Elderly Care and Research (JGCR)
- Some Speculated / Potential Benefits of COVID-19 (JGCR / BBC Radio 4’s Rethink / BGS)
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Tag Archives: Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Change
Consensus Statement on Healthy Ageing (PHE / CfAB)
Summary Public Health England and the Centre for Ageing Better have released a consensus statement, containing widely accepted proposals for making England the “best place in the world to grow old”. Five core principles are given, with the aim of … Continue reading →
Posted in Age UK, Alzheimer's Society, Alzheimer’s Research UK, Carers UK, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Health Foundation, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, Mental Health Foundation, NHS England, NHS Improvement, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Public Health England, Royal College of Psychiatrists, SCIE, Standards, UK, Universal Interest
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Tagged Active and Healthy Ageing, Age of No Retirement?’, Age-Friendly Cities and Communities, Age-Friendly Communities, Age-Friendly Housing, Ageing Policy in the UK, Ageing Population, Ageing Society, Ageing Society Grand Challenge, Ageism, Ageism in Britain, Ageism in Wider Society, Ageist Terminology, AGILE, Allied Health Professionals Federation, Anna Dixon, Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Alliance, Association of Ambulance Chief Executives, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services, Association of Directors of Public Health, Awareness of Local Assets, Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Change, Barriers and Facilitators to Participation, Barriers to Employing Older Workers, Barriers to Integrated Care, Barriers to Involvement, Barriers to Joined-Up Care, Barriers to Later Life Learning, Barriers to Support, Barriers to Talking About Ageing, Barriers: Discrimination, British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy, British Association for the Study of Community Dentistry, British Dental Association, British Geriatrics Society, British Society of Gerodontology, Campaign to End Loneliness, Canal and River Trust, Care and Repair England, Centre for Ageing Better (CfAB), Centre for Mental Health, Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, Clinical Epidemiology: Keele University, Communities and Service Design, Consensus on Healthy Ageing, Consensus Statement on Healthy Ageing : PHE and the Centre for Ageing Better, Contribution to Society, Council for Work and Health, Dementia-Friendly Communities, Dental Professionals Alliance, Design Council, Duncan Selbie: Chief Executive of Public Health England, EngAgeNet, Faculty of Dental Surgery: Royal College of Surgeons of England, Faculty of General Dental Practice (UK), Faculty of Public Health, Health and Housing, Health Inequalities, Health Inequalities in England, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Ageing: Consensus Statement, Housing Learning and Improvement Network (Housing LIN), Housing LIN, Independent Age, Inequalities in Health and Wellbeing, Inequalities In Healthy Life Expectancy, Inequalities in Life Expectancy, Institute for Employment Studies, International Longevity Centre UK, Later Life, Living Streets, Making England the Best in the World to Grow Old, Manchester Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing, Mental Health Foundation, Mental Health Inequalities, National Fire Chief’s Council, National Housing Federation, National Oral Health Promotion Group, National Police Chief's Council, Natural England, Negative Impact of Ageist Attitudes, Newcastle University Institute for Ageing, Overcoming Barriers, Oxford Institute of Population Ageing, PHE: Public Health England, Physiological Society, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Better Than Cure, Professor Carol Brayne CBE: Director of Cambridge Institute of Public Health, Public Health England (PHE), Public Health Medicine: University of Cambridge, Race Equality Foundation, Royal College of Psychiatrists, Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors, Royal Osteoporosis Society, Royal Pharmaceutical Society, Royal Town Planning Institute, Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE), Societal Contribution, Society of British Dental Nurses, Society of Occupational Medicine, Sport England, St John Ambulance, Turning Point, UCL Institute of Healthy Ageing, UK Active, UK Public Health Register, University College London, University of Manchester, University of Northumbria, University of the Third Age, Urban Design Group, Versus Arthritis
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Chief Medical Officer’s Report: Health 2040 – Better Health Within Reach (DHSC / BBC News / NHS England)
Summary The latest annual report from Professor Dame Sally Davies, the Chief Medical Officer (CMO) for England expects a health revolution (sic), with a more prominent re-positioning of healthier lifestyles in society, by 2040: “The environment we live in must … Continue reading →
Posted in Assistive Technology, BBC News, Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health, Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, Mental Health, National, NHS, NHS England, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Public Health England, Quick Insights, Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, Standards, Statistics, Systematic Reviews, UK, Universal Interest
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Tagged Annual Report of Chief Medical Officer 2018: Better Health Within Reach (Health 2040), Ban of Snacking on Public Transport (Proposal), Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Change, BBC Health News, Birmingham Women’s and Children’s Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Burden of Multimorbidity, Change4Life, Change4Life National Consumer Campaign on Sugar Reduction, Chief Medical Officer, Chief Medical Officer (CMO) Annual Report: Health 2040, Chief Medical Officer: Professor Dame Sally Davies, Childhood Obesity, Children and Young People’s Wellbeing - State of the Nation Report (Department for Education 2019), Demographic Changes, Demographics, Demography, Department of Health and Social Care (Formerly the Department of Health), Diagnosis and Management of T2DM in Children and Young People, Emerging Technology, Encouraging Healthy Behaviour, Environmental and Lifestyle Factors, European Comparisons, Fiscal Levers: Sugar Tax, GBD Forecasting Framework, George Eliot Hospital Trust, Global Burden of Disease (GBD), Global Health, Global Health Investment, Health 2040 - Better Health Within Reach: Annual Report of Chief Medical Officer (2018), Health Inequalities, Health Inequalities in England, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Lifestyles, Institute for Public Policy Research (ippr), International Comparisons, Leading Causes of Years of Life Lost in 2016 and 2040, Leading Causes of YLLs in 2016 and 2040: United Kingdom, Leeds, Life Expectancy, Life Expectancy 1990 to 2040 in UK and 8 Comparison Countries, Lifestyle Advice, Lifestyle Change Interventions, Lifestyle Change Programmes, Lifestyle Factors, Lifestyle Intervention Programmes, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Local Health Environments, Machine Learning for Individualised Medicine, Making Sense of Uncertainty, Mental Disorder and Inequalities, Mental Health Inequalities, Multimorbidities, Multimorbidities and Long-Term Conditions, Neuroprotective Lifestyles, Normalisation, Normalisation Process Theory, Personalised Medicine, Personalised Medicine: Improving Outcomes, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Professor Dame Sally Davies: the Chief Medical Officer (CMO) for England, Public Health, Public Health England (PHE), Public Mental Health Priorities, Public Understanding of Health Inequalities, Reducing Health Inequalities, Risk Attributable YLLs, Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust, Social Determinants of Health Inequalities, Social Health, Social Health and Communities, Social Isolation and Loneliness, State of the Nation 2019: Children and Young People’s Wellbeing (Department for Education 2019), Structural View of Health Inequalities, Sugar Consumption, Sugar Tax, Uncertainty, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Vascular and Lifestyle Factors, Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust, Years of Life Lost (YLLs), YLLs Attributed to Risk Factors in 2016 and 2040
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Unmet Social Care Needs of Older People Living in Their Own Homes (Ipsos MORI / NIHR / Age UK / NatCen Social Research / Independent Age)
Summary Ipsos MORI, in association with the NIHR School for Social Care Research, Age UK, NatCen Social Research and Independent Age, have produced a report exploring the nature and extent of “unmet needs” for social care among older persons living … Continue reading →
Posted in Age UK, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Integrated Care, Management of Condition, Mental Health, National, NIHR, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Patient Care Pathway, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, Standards, Statistics, UK NSC, Universal Interest
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Tagged Access to Health and Social Care Support, Adult Social Care, Adult Social Care Funding, Adult Social Care Funding (England), Adult Social Care in England, Advice and Information, Affordability of Care and Support, Ageing Population, Aids and Adaptations, Allison Dunatchik: NatCen Social Research, Assessments and Eligibility, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Change, Barriers to Joined-Up Care, Barriers to Support, Barriers: Access to Funding, Barriers: Inconsistency in Care Standards, Barriers: Lack of Continuity of Care, Care Act 2014, Care Funding, Caroline Abrahams: Director of Age UK, Commissioning of Domiciliary Care, Disability and Home Care in England’s Older Population, Domiciliary Care, Dr Margaret Blake: Research Director at Ipsos MORI, Eligibility, Eligibility Criteria for Social Care, Eligibility for Care, ELSA, ELSA: English Longitudinal Study of Ageing, English Local Authorities, English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), Failing Safety Net (Age UK), Fair Access to Care Services (FACS) Eligibility Criteria, Financial Constraints, Financial Eligibility, Financial Issues, Financial Pressures, Health Survey for England, Health Survey for England (HSE), Help for Elderly Living at Home, Hidden Unmet Needs, Home Adaptations, Home Care, Home Care Funding and Costs, Home Care Organisations, Home Care Packages (HCP), Home Care Services, Home Care Standards, Home Care Support, Home Care: Commissioning, Housing Adaptations, Impact(s) of Unmet Needs, In-Depth Interviews With Older People, Independence, Independence and Wellbeing, Independence at Home, Independence of Older Adults, Independent Age, Independent Living At Home, Individual Care Plans (Complex Needs), Information and Advice, Information and Advice Services, Integrated Commissioning, Ipsos Mori, Ipsos Public Affairs, Janet Morrison (Chief Executive of Independent Age), Lack of Bespoke Information and Advice, LGA: Local Government Association, Living Alone, Local Authorities, Local Authority Contribution to Care Costs or Adaptations, Local Care Providers, Local Government Association: LGA, Local Service Providers, Loneliness and Social Isolation, Long-Term Care (LTC), Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Loss of Confidence, Loss of Mobility, Loss of Purpose, Meaningful Activity and Occupation, Mobility Problems, NatCen Social Research, NatCen Social Research (NatCen), NatCen Social Research: University College London, National Minimum Eligibility Threshold for Adult Care and Support, Nature and Prevalence of Unmet Need for Social Care, NIHR School for Social Care Research, NIHR School for Social Care Research (SSCR), Older People With Complex Needs, Patterns of Experience and Factors Contributing to People Developing Care Needs, Personal Well-Being, Predictors of Unmet Need, Preventative Care, Preventative Interventions, Preventative Services, Prevention, Public Transport, Publicly Funded Support, Purpose in Life, Qualitative Research, Quantitative Secondary Analysis of English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) Data, Quantitative Secondary Analysis of Health Survey for England (HSE) Data, Reduced Mobility, Reluctance to Admit Unmet Needs, Resilience, Social Care Funding, Social Care Funding Gap, Social Care Providers, Social Contacts, Social Isolation, Specialist Welfare Advice, Support for People with Complex Needs, Supporting Wellbeing Resilience and Independence, Transport and Mobility, Unmet Needs, Unmet Needs and Well-Being, Unmet Needs of Community-Dwelling Older Persons, Unmet Social Care Needs of Older People Living in Their Own Homes, Well-Being, Willingness to Pay for Care and Support
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Dementia in Old Age: Risk Factors and Primary Prevention (PHE)
Summary Public Health England (PHE) has released a collection of documents to guide commissioners and researchers; the aim being to assist decision-making in the prioritisation of primary prevention measures for dementia risk reduction. Evidence is presented for the risk of … Continue reading →
Posted in Commissioning, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Integrated Care, Mental Health, Models of Dementia Care, National, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Public Health England, Quick Insights, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest
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Tagged Active Lifestyle, Ageing Population, Ageing Well, Ageing Well Programmes in Sheffield and Hampshire, Air Pollution, Air Pollution and Risk of Dementia, Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Consumption, Alzheimer’s Disease: Risk Factors, Association Between Physical Activity and Cognitive Function and / or Dementia, Auditory Impairment, Awareness About Dementia Risk Reduction Among People in Midlife, Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Change, Behavioural Risk Factors, Blood Pressure, Brain Training, Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Cholesterol Levels, Cholesterol Reduction, Cognitive Impairment (Potential Risk and Protective Factors), Cognitive Impairment (Potential Risk Factors), Cognitive Interventions, Cognitive Stimulation, Cognitive Training, Creating Dementia Friendly Environments, Cumulative Benefit of Reducing Risk Factors, Dementia and Diabetes, Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders, Dementia in Older Age: Barriers to Primary Prevention and Risk Factors (PHE 2017), Dementia Prevention, Dementia Risk Factors, Dementia Risk Reduction Among People in Midlife: NHS Health Checks, Dementia Risk Reduction and Prevention, Diet and Dementia, Environmental and Lifestyle Factors, Epidemiology, Epidemiology and Statistics, Exercise, Health Matters: Midlife Approaches to Reduce Dementia Risk, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Hearing, Hearing Loss and Cognition, Hearing Loss and Cognitive Decline, Hearing Loss and Cognitive Impairment, Hearing Loss and Dementia, Hearing Loss in Adulthood, Hearing Loss: Risk of Dementia, Hypertension, Impact of Hearing Loss, In-MINDD, Innovative Midlife Intervention for Dementia Deterrence (InMINDD), Life-Long Learning, Lifestyle Factors, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Loneliness, Loneliness and Dementia, Loneliness and Isolation, Loneliness and Social Isolation, Loneliness Harms Health, LSE's Personal Social Services Research Unit (PSSRU), Mental Activities in Mid-Life, Mental Distress, Mid-Life Health and Well-Being, Midlife Hypertension, Midlife Obesity, Modifiable Risk Factors, Newcastle West Clinical Commissioning Group Ageing Well Strategy, Obesity Risk, Obesity Risk Factor, One You Campaign (PHE), Overlapping Risk Factors, Participation in Social Activities, Personal Social Services Research Unit (PSSRU): London School of Economics and Political Science, PHE: Public Health England, Physical Activity and Health Benefits, Physical Activity Before Dementia, Physical Exercise, Physical Exercise Programmes, Physical Inactivity, Potentially Modifiable Socio-Environmental Risk Factors for Dementia, Preclinical Dementia and Associated Lifestyle Changes, Preclinical Phase of Dementia, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Primary Prevention Services for Dementia, Prolonged Sedentary Time, PSSRU at London School of Economics and Political Science, Public Health England (PHE), Raised Cholesterol, Regular Physical Activity, Renal Dysfunction, Return on Investment, Richmond Group of Charities, Risk Factors, Risk Factors and Preventive Interventions for Alzheimer Disease, Sedentary Behaviour, Sedentary Lifestyles, Smoking, Smoking Cessation, Social Activities, Social Epidemiology, Social Isolation, Social Isolation and Loneliness, Socio-Environmental Risk Factors for Dementia, Tobacco, Tobacco Consumption, Travis Perkins, Type 2 Diabetes, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), Unhealthy Lifestyles, Vascular Risk Factors
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