2nd Africa Regional Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International

2nd Africa Regional Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International

On behalf of ARDAG Susanne Spittel attended the 2nd Africa Regional Conference of Alzheimer’s Disease International,  Indaba Hotel, Johannesburg, South Africa, 9 – 11 May 2013.

About the Conference

The Africa Alzheimer’s Congress has been created to provide education, information, conversation, and inspiration about Alzheimer’s and other memory related diseases.

Learn about everything related to the disease and the social factors that influence the health and wellbeing of communities.

Leave with important connections and an enlightened approach and the knowledge to enrich the community that you work in.

Objectives of the Conference

The Africa Alzheimer’s Congress, a first of its kind in South Africa, will focus not only on the Pharmaceutical and Medical needs of Alzheimer’s patients, but also on those of the Caretakers.

The conference, which targets doctors, specialists and care givers will feature a wide range of topics as can be seen in the Scientific Schedule.

This unique opportunity will bring together leading experts to explore international research on diagnosis methodology, as well as current and future treatment options for Alzheimer’s.

It will be an event to share knowledge and experience, develop collaborative thinking and inspire the next generation of our best and brightest young people to take up a career in this field.

Victims of Witches Camps Could be Sufferers of Dementia – Executive Director

Mrs Esther Dey, Executive Director of Alzheimer’s and Related Disorders Association of Ghana (ARDAG) said at the weekend that victims of witches and faith-based camps in the country could be suffering from a medical condition referred to as Dementia.

She defined dementia as an umbrella term which covers a whole range of signs and symptoms that are related to certain conditions or illnesses of the brain, which is of grave public health consequence.

Mrs Dey made these known to participants at a public outreach programme to create awareness on the disease for the aged and Churches at Bodada and Ayoma in the Volta region.

She said dementia was characterised by a progressive decline of a person’s mental ability, namely the ability to remember, make rational judgement, undertake daily tasks and to communicate.

Mrs Dey indicated because the disease affected the brain and the nervous system, sufferers could exhibit insanity, uncoordinated thoughts and abnormal traits that could give the obscure reason for their detention in witches and faith-based camps to undergo such inhumane abuses.

She said they were crimes perpetrated by relatives and community members acting from stark ignorance of the disease.

The Executive Director disclosed that according to the World Health Organisation, the number of people suffering from dementia around the globe was expected to reach 65.7million sufferers by 2030.

She added that by 2050 it was likely to rise by 70 per cent above today’s figure of 35.6million sufferers and it was expected that 7.7million new cases of dementia would be reported each year – with a new person diagnosed every four seconds.

“The estimated annual cost of treatment and care is $604 billion (£379 billion)” she stated.

Mrs Dey said the common types of dementia included Alzheimer’s disease (constituting about 70 percent of cases), vascular, dementia with Lewy bodies and Pick’s disease.

She said conditions which may develop into dementia included Parkinson’s disease, genetic/inherited illnesses (Huntington’s disease), Down’s syndrome resulting from infection, HIV, and Creutzfeld-Jacob disease.

Mrs Dey said studies revealed that dementia affects the brain structure, especially the frontal lobes, and had rather higher rates in advanced economies compared to those of developing countries, where less studies had been done.

She said its outcomes included differential survival rates, the hiding of cases by relatives because of stigma, reluctance to seek medical assistance, the feeling that the old person had come to the end of his/her useful life, mis-diagnosis and defective case-finding techniques.

She said ARDAG, a not-for-profit entity was positioned to create awareness about the disease and establish state-of-the-art rehabilitation centres for sufferers of dementia across the country.

The Executive Director said the passage of the mental health law would help increase the national consciousness about such illnesses but appealed to the authorities to expedite action on the promulgation of the law on the aged.

MrsDey advised relatives, families and community members to familiarise themselves with the disease to avoid subjecting sufferers to inhumane abuses at camps, stating that dementia was a medical condition that could be controlled by experts.