New program to help people move forward after a dementia diagnosis

New program to help people move forward after a dementia diagnosis.

An innovative new program is aiming to help an estimated 60,000 Australians diagnosed with dementia each year better understand the next steps and find their way forward.


Most people feel overwhelmed when first diagnosed with dementia. They can experience despair of their future, lose hope and typically don’t know what to do next.

To address the issue, COGNISANCE, an international research collaboration, has launched ‘Forward with Dementia’, a program to improve the diagnostic experience, post diagnosis support and connections for people with dementia and their carers.

Unveiled today, the program was jointly planned and developed by leading researchers from UNSW Sydney, the University of Sydney and University of Wollongong in collaboration with colleagues from Canada, the Netherlands, Poland and the United Kingdom.

“In the past, people were told nothing could be done. They may have been given some medication, asked to return in six months, told to get their affairs in order and warned about driving. And that was it. Those days are over … or they should be! We can do a lot better,” said Scientia Professor Henry Brodaty, Project Leader and Co-Director of UNSW Sydney’s Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA).

People with dementia can live positively for many years. There are treatment strategies and we need to spread the word and assist diagnosticians and other health workers to improve their practice. By working together, we can help set people newly diagnosed with dementia on a better path.” 

Program resources, developed with the help of people living with dementia and their carers, include a website (forwardwithdementia.org) to guide people in the first year following diagnosis. The website offers information, advice, and tools, and shares experiences and strategies used by people with dementia and their carers.

“It provides the information newly diagnosed people with dementia said they wanted and needed but struggled to find after diagnosis. They told us that much of the available information was too generic, and mostly focused on more severe dementia,” says Professor Lee-Fay Low, Professor in Ageing and Health at the University of Sydney.

“It was hard to find practical advice about what they should do after diagnosis, like how they could get rehabilitative treatments and maintain their independence. So this is what we have aimed to provide.”

Website tools include a checklist of questions for people to ask their doctor, suggestions for how and when to share their diagnosis with family and friends, and planning tools to achieve their goals and overcome barriers caused by dementia symptoms.

To get the message out across the country, the program includes a national social media campaign.

“‘Campaigning is important to change community beliefs about dementia. We need to shift perceptions and help people to understand there is a life to live beyond a dementia diagnosis. Lifestyle strategies and health and care services can effectively support people to move forward with a better quality of life,” Associate Professor Phillipson, Principal Research Fellow from the University of Wollongong said.

On top of this, ‘Forward with Dementia’ also targets doctors who diagnose dementia.

“We’ve consulted with diagnosticians throughout Australia, including specialists and support staff in Memory Clinics,” Professor Brodaty said.

“Many doctors find telling people they have dementia very difficult, so we’re trying to improve communication and encourage doctors to start dementia care planning and make referral to essential services, including counselling and allied health.”

The Forward with Dementia program was funded by the NHMRC and the European Union (EU) Joint Programme – Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND), a global research initiative aimed at tackling the challenge of neurodegenerative diseases.

For more information visit forwardwithdementia.org

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